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Voting and Civil Rights |
| Voting and civil rights -- and the 2000
election The United States Commission of
Civil Rights will hold a briefing on September 17 on allegations of the
denial of voting rights in the 2000 election
The 216th General Assembly - July 2004 in Richmond, VA
- approved a policy statement entitled "Disenfranchisement of People of
Color in the U.S. Electoral Process." You may see that in the minutes of
the General Assembly in your Presbytery Office or Church Office (if they
are kept there). You may also go to the Office of the General Assembly
web page at www.pcusa.org/oga Once
there, you may click onto the GA 216 or any previous recent Assembly for
policy.
USCCR briefing on voting and election reform -
Is America Ready to Vote?
Voting Barriers, Provisional & Absentee Ballots, and Voter Enfranchisement
[10-13-04]
September 17, 2004 Briefing
In a continuing probe of potential barriers and challenges confronting
voters in the November 2004 elections, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights
(Commission) is convening the third in a series of briefings on the status
of election reform implementation and voting integrity: USCCR Briefing on
Voting and Election Reform - Is America Ready To Vote? Voting Barriers,
Provisional & Absentee Ballots, and Voter Enfranchisement. The Commission
will hear from Sheldon T. Bradshaw, Deputy Assistant Attorney General for
Civil Rights, U.S. Department of Justice. The Commission will conduct the
voting rights briefing in Washington, D.C. on September 17, 2004.
The Commission will ask DOJ Deputy Assistant Attorney General for Civil
Rights Sheldon T. Bradshaw to update it on DOJ's response to a written
Commission request directed to Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights
R. Alexander Acosta that DOJ investigate alleged federal law violations by
the state of Florida in pursuing its felon purge efforts. These allegations
were raised by witnesses at the Commission's July 2004 briefing on election
reform issues. Specifically, the Commission will attempt to elicit a
response from DOJ regarding possible violations of the Voting Rights Act of
1965 and other civil rights laws by Florida officials.
As the second in command of DOJ's Civil Rights Division, Bradshaw is well
qualified to apprise the Commission and the public of DOJ's civil rights
enforcement activities in regards to voting rights. The briefing will
explore barriers to the ballot box, specifically, widely reported problems
with provisional and absentee balloting, implementation of voter
identification requirements, voter intimidation and suppression, and poll
worker preparedness. Additionally, the briefing will assess voter
enfranchisement generally relating to the status of Help America Vote Act (HAVA)
election reform implementation.
Recent allegations include events in Florida, where many elderly black
voters have been reportedly intimidated by police officers investigating
alleged absentee voting fraud; in Texas, where students at the predominately
black Prairie View A&M University were threatened with arrest by the local
district attorney, who erroneously suggested they were not eligible to vote
in the county in which the school was located; South Dakota, where some
Native American poll workers and voters asserted that voting fraud
investigations were racially motivated and only served to intimidate and
discourage Indian voters; and in Chicago, where problems with voter
identification and provisional balloting implementation reportedly had
racial implications.
The briefing panelists range from a high-ranking government official to
community representatives and advocates. Joining the Deputy Assistant
Attorney General for Civil Rights, on the briefing panel are: Maria Valdez,
Regional Counsel, Chicago, Mexican American Legal Defense and Education
Fund; Jacqueline Johnson, Executive Director, National Congress of American
Indians; and Courtenay Strickland, Voting Rights Director, American Civil
Liberties Union - Miami, Florida.
During the September briefing, the Commission will hear
from DOJ on the status of Justice's voting rights enforcement's efforts,
including its efforts at investigating and preventing instances of possible
voter suppression and intimidation activities recently reported in the
press. Among other things, the briefing will explore DOJ's duty to protect
the civil rights of voters to legitimately cast ballots and have their votes
counted, while at the same time attempting to preserve the integrity of
elections nationwide.
The Commission will also hear from representatives of national
organizations, including Valdez and Johnson, who will give presentations
regarding voting issues and concerns facing their respective communities,
and the nation as a whole. They will discuss problems in recent elections
that negatively impacted voters in Latino and Native American communities
across the country. Both Valdez and Johnson will primarily focus their
presentations on issues of voter intimidation/suppression, identification
requirements, and provisional/absentee balloting. Specifically, both
panelists will assess the recent change instituted under HAVA that requires
new voters to present identification at the polling sites, as well as
charges that state identification requirements have been used to discourage
voting in communities of color.
Strickland will discuss the impact of precinct based provisional balloting
in Florida, as well as nationally. The purpose of the provisional ballot
alternative, federally mandated by HAVA, is to avoid disenfranchising voters
and allowing their votes to count as recorded votes if elections officials
confirm eligibility. However, precinct based provisional balloting in
Florida and other states with similar legislation, may have transformed the
spirit of this progressive reform aimed at protecting the right to vote into
a scheme to disenfranchise voters.
September's briefing is the third in a series of briefings held by the
Commission examining America's readiness to vote. On April 9, 2004, the
Commission convened technology experts and others to discuss issues
regarding the security of high-technology voting systems; uniform voter
identification requirements; and voter accessibility to polling places and
machines. The panelists concluded that election reform should be implemented
with the following provisions: equal access to the ballot for all voters;
second chance voting and voter verification; compliance with national
certification standards; and irrefutable electronic voting security that
achieves the purpose for which the solution is being offered.
In conjunction with its April briefing, the Commission prepared an election
readiness briefing paper titled "Is America Ready to Vote?" The briefing
paper described the Commission's findings and recommendations on election
vulnerabilities following the 2000 presidential election; the implementation
of HAVA; the national election reform inadequacies and potential pitfalls
still facing the country; and the status of electronic voting system reform.
The Commission's briefing paper was updated in July to reflect election
reform and voting integrity developments, and can be found on the web at
www.usccr.gov.
The Commission's second briefing, which took place on July 15, 2004,
explored HAVA implementation issues, including: electronic voting system
standards, the accountability and reliability of electronic voting, voter
list maintenance, poll worker training and voter education, and felony purge
and felon disenfranchisement. The panelists discussed the widely reported
problems facing Florida voters due to glaring inaccuracies in the state's
purge list of suspected felons, which eventually caused the list to be
invalidated by Florida's Secretary of State. During the July briefing, it
came to light that the state of Florida was aware of the potential
inaccuracies and over-inclusiveness of the list, which would have served to
disenfranchise numerous legitimate voters if implemented.
Commission's work on voting rights issues
The Commission is a bipartisan, fact-finding agency established by Congress
to investigate complaints alleging that citizens are being deprived of their
right to vote by reason of their race, color, religion, sex, age,
disability, or national origin, or by reason of fraudulent practices; to
appraise the laws and policies of the United States; and to serve as a
national clearinghouse for information pertaining to discrimination or
denials of the equal protection of the laws based on race, color, religion,
sex, age, disability, national origin, or in the administration of justice.
The Commission is also required by law to submit reports to the President
and Congress at such times as the Commission, the Congress, or the President
shall deem desirable.
Consequently, addressing voting rights issues has been a core responsibility
for the Commission since it was founded in 1957. The Commission has broad
authority over voting rights, and general jurisdiction to examine
allegations regarding the rights of U.S. citizens to vote and to have their
vote counted. Since 1957, the fact-finding that the Commission has conducted
in the fulfillment of this duty has resulted in more than a dozen national,
and numerous more local and regional reports on voting rights and political
participation.
In 2001, pursuant to its authority, and fulfilling its obligations, the
Commission examined evidence from the controversial 2000 elections. Based on
reports of widespread voter disenfranchisement in Florida, the Commission
was asked to go to Florida, to conduct investigations based upon a unanimous
vote. The fact-finding included three days of hearings and sworn testimony
from witnesses - among them, state officials, local elections officials,
county supervisors, poll workers, and registered voters. Nationwide, the
Commission also probed accounts of problematic machinery, and subsequently
issued two reports documenting its findings, (1) Voting Irregularities in
Florida During the 2000 Presidential Election, and (2) Election Reform: An
Analysis of Proposals and the Commission's Recommendations for Improving
America's Election System. Both of these reports can be found on the web at
www.usccr.gov.
The Commission found that the problems in Florida and elsewhere were serious
and not isolated. In many cases, they were foreseeable and could have been
prevented. The failure to resolve election system flaws resulted in an
extraordinarily high level of disenfranchisement.
Disenfranchised voters are individuals who are entitled to vote, want to
vote, or attempt to vote, but who are deprived from either voting or having
their votes counted. Among many other problems, the Commission documented
(1) failure of leadership and accountability from those with responsibility
for ensuring elections are properly planned and executed; (2) inadequate
resources for voter education, training of poll workers, and for Election
Day trouble-shooting and problem solving; (3) inferior voting equipment
and/or ballot design; (4) poorly designed and executed registration and
purge procedures; (5) inconsistency among state laws for re-enfranchising
former offenders who have paid their debts to society; and (6) lack of
provisions for voters with disabilities or who need language assistance.
The Commission also gave testimony before the Senate Committee on Rules and
Administration. Through these actions and others, the Commission urged
Congress to consider its recommendations and to legislatively articulate the
duties of federal and state governments to promote the exercise of the right
to vote. In 2002, HAVA was enacted to reduce the dire consequences that the
Commission and others had documented. This national election reform law
included many of the Commission's recommendations.
09/16/04
Rev. Elenora Giddings Ivory
Director, Washington Office
Presbyterian Church (USA)
202-543-1126
110 Maryland Avenue, NE, Suite 104
Washington, DC 20002
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Voices of Sophia blog
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