Much to look at today -- and it was a toss up as
to which topic [Obama or voting] should take bonus position; both are worthy of
our attention. But first, a snip that caught my eye -- look at this
headline:
Robert Novak Brain Tumor Diagnosed
There
will be less angst over the Dark Prince than there was over the Old Lion of
Congress, but ... wonder how much they used their cell phones?!
Obama's
'risky' visit to the world, away from the Punch and Judy campaign show, turned
out to be picture perfect in more ways than one, everything breaking for him.
And he was unaccustomedly present on Sunday TV, punching up his victory.
Coaxing a glitch into a firestorm, the McRib camp put out an ad that O refused
to visit troops because he couldn't take pictures -- truth is, the Pentagon
informed him that he was unable to bring campaign aids with him, and since he'd
already switched from diplomatic to campaign hat, he bypassed in order not to
create a political issue by using campaign funds for the trip. MSM seems
unwilling to report truth on this one; too 'nuanced,' I guess.
The 'Liberal media' bias against Obama
is pretty apparent; also gone underreported is the report that foreign
diplomatic workers were barred from attending Obama's Berlin speech, but not
from flocking to McCain's Ontario speech. The
Liberal media meme is kind of like the notion that the 'middle' is somewhere
between Bush and Obama ... no, that middle is still Far Right; or the smoke
being blown that the majority of the nation is in that middle;
NOT.
The media is not Liberal ... it's "for profit."
Period.
Clearly, McRib's nastiness over Obama's big crowds and respectful
international attention has to do with his own dinky crowds and missing
ass-kissers; I read a report that he showed up in some small town this week to have his plane met by a single reporter. He would be better off, cheesy as he is, not pouring any more whine
over the last weeks issues -- indeed, you'd think he'd want a little time
without the spotlight to re-think his campaign; he's been painted into a corner
with the 'time line' business, now that Maliki and even Bush are willing to shift
toward Obama's plan. Mac is running entirely on the efficacy of the surge -- and
the news out of Iraq indicates that there's new problems brewing there along
with an up-tick of violence.
The series of events that led him to a
Fudge Haus in Pennsylvania while Barack was giving his Berlin speech to 200,000
pretty much says it all -- and these comments from a guy over at HuffPo who was
live-blogging the
event:
The
McCain campaign alerts me that their candidate is now juggling six flaming
chainsaws, and it's really awesome, and you're missing it.
and
later
Meanwhile, John McCain is about to circumnavigate the state of
Ohio in a jetpack that he designed and built himself. It's too bad we are
missing it!
Obama is moving on to huddle with his economic
advisers this week [including Warren Buffett] while McSame continues to rail on
about war [the one topic that animates him;] leaving an impression in the minds
of the nation that Obama looks presidential and in-charge while Mac looks ...
well ... old and cranky. Yet still we hear what a 'horse race' this election is
... when polling shows that's a lie. Blame MSM who wants us breathless and
watching, reading, wondering 'til the very last minute. The Dems still have
hurdles to leap ... but not the ones being reported.
This isn't a horse race -- it's shaping up to be
a rout. Barring major scandal or October Surprise, Obama's got this in the can
... crusty old white Republicans and generational issues be damned.
With
Obama enjoying a nine-point lead nationally [the polls flip around but the national indicators are stable] and Johnny Mac so desperate to get
attention that he's gone a bit twisted and whiny, it's important to revisit the
delivery system for votes once again; we should have learned this lesson by now, but it's still a major problem. Voter rolls are in
jeopardy due to the usual hitches and bumbles, a continuing GOP push to remove
those they'd rather not see vote, and more ... this season we have hundreds of
thousands of people being evicted from their homes and changing address, putting
their vote in limbo.
Tomorrow,
we'll look at the impeachment business; I spent Friday night watching truth
spoken on C-Span, one witness after another ... while the rest of the nation
pretended things are 'normal' in an election year.
It seems clear ...
the stanglehold the Right had on American politics is soooo "over" --
it's more like the desperate grip of someone sinking into quicksand, clutching
an overhead vine. What comes next, though we'll have to fight for it, is Left of
center for real.
Jude
More MSM Malfeasance -- The
Conyers Hearing And Tom Brokaw's So-Called "Interview" Of
Obama.
Lawrence Velvel, OpEdNews
July 28, 2008
http://www.opednews.com/articles/More-MSM-Malfeasance----Th-by-Lawrence-Velvel-080728-359.html
Here are two recent impressions. They will
be stated in conclusory fashion, without the usual supporting elaboration and
details.
Last Friday John Conyers held a hearing where several
witnesses (e.g., Vincent Bugliosi, Bruce Fein, Rocky Anderson, Elliott Adams)
made truly powerful statements about the immorality, criminality, and
incompetence of the current administration. The hearing was carried live on
CSpan.
Did the mainstream print media write about the hearing the
next day, Saturday? The New York Times didn't – there was not one word about it
in Saturday's Times. No doubt the geniuses who brought us WMDs and didn't tell
us about NSA spying before the 2004 election -- thus respectively bringing us
Iraq and a second term for Bush -- thought that what was said at the hearing on
Friday shouldn't be written about because much of it is old news in their
minds. Thus, better to fill the paper with numerous lengthy stories whose
details, or even existence is often of little interest or consequence to most of
us. The Boston Globe did write about the hearing, but almost entirely failed to
write about the crucial parts while extensively covering the excuse mongering
Republican Congressmen who were engaged in pretenses from the get-go.
I
don't know what other print media did on Saturday, but to me the responses of
the Times and the Globe on Saturday say it all about the long term bad impact of
the corporate MSM.
Then there is Tom Brokaw, who originally hailed from
reactionary North Dakota (didn't he?), with the smooth good looks and mindless
hero worshipping characteristics that lead to success in America, especially on
mindless corporate television. I happened upon Brokaw interviewing Obama on
Meet The Press on Saturday morning. Now, I don't watch TV much, but anyone
sensate has seen Brokaw a fair amount over the last 20 or 25 years. But never
have I seen him so obviously angry, so obviously antagonistic, as when
interviewing Obama. It was palpable, and it tells you yet again where the
corporate MSM's collective heads are at.
Let me say for Obama that he
made an intellectual monkey out of the transparently stone dumb fool who was
interviewing him. Obama remained calm, articulate, thoughtful, parried Brokaw's
most strident efforts, and at times even joked when Brokaw did something
especially stupid like reading a tremendously long excerpt from a column by
David Brooks disparaging Obama -- a reading far longer than any I have ever seen
directed at any presidential candidate before.
Brokaw's conduct was
yet another example of where the corporate MSM's collective heads are at, while
Obama's measured speech and conduct will only make the MSM fear and dislike him
the more because even vicious efforts by a major MSM figure seemed unable to
rattle him. ++
Americans Move Left, New York Times Misses
It
Jeff Cohen, HuffPo
July 27, 2008
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jeff-cohen/americans-move-left-new-y_b_115208.html
The headline atop Saturday's op-ed page was a hallowed standby for the
New York Times: "Americans Move to the Middle." Assembled by Times"visual
columnist" Charles Blow, the text of the column was dwarfed by 15 graphs
tracking recent movement in American public opinion, based on Gallup polls.
There was one problem: the headline totally distorted the data.
An
accurate headline would have been "American Opinion Moves Leftward" -- but
accuracy was apparently trumped by centrist ideology. (Yes, there are ideologues
of the center, as well as of Left or Right.)
It's a cherished myth of
many in establishment punditry that most Americans perpetually and happily find
their way to the safe center of American politics. This pleasant status quo
consensus is marred, in Blow's text, by "party extremists sharpening their wedge
issues" to rally their bases and caricature their opponents.
Here's the data
presented by Blow and the Times (pdf): 15 public opinion graphs on various
issues starting in 2001-2003 and ending in 2006-2008. Of the 15, about a dozen
track issues on which there are recognizable positions associated with Right and
Left. Of those dozen, the trend in opinion is unmistakenly leftward on virtually
every one.
On foreign policy:
-- "The Iraq war has made the U.S.
less safe from terrorism." 37% in 2003 and 49% four years later.
-- "The
U.S. should not attack another country unless it has been attacked first." 51%
in Oct. 2002 and 57% in 2006
-- "The government is spending too much for
national defense and military purposes." 19% in Feb. 2001 and 44% in Feb.
2008.
On cultural issues:
-- "Organized religion should have less
influence in this nation." 22% in Jan. 2001 and 34% in Jan. 2008.
Asked
if the following were "morally acceptable," trend lines were leftward. "Gay
relationships": 40% in May 2001 to 48% in May 2008. "Divorce": 59% to 70% in
same time period. "Medical research using stem cells from human embryos": from
52% in May 2002 to 62% in May 2008.
Some might argue that there is one
Times graph that trends rightward: "The state of moral values in the country as
a whole is getting worse." It went from 67% in May 2002 to 81% in May 2008. Yet
I'm no conservative and I'm absolutely part of the 81% -- given the declining
morals that descend from corporate, government and religious elites.
So
the Times presents Gallup data showing a clear trend toward the left, and calls
it a "Move to the Middle." Is the assumption that we were mostly rightwingers a
few years ago? Or is the "move to the middle" line simply more reassuring to an
establishment newspaper?
The reality is that longterm trends in American
opinion are generally leftward on issues, as documented in well-researched
studies.
It's a reality that troubles those Beltway pundits who
constantly goad Barack Obama toward "the center" on issues like Iraq and NAFTA
-- when they mean away from the center of mass opinion and upwards toward the
center of elite opinion.
A demagogue like Sean Hannity instinctively
knows this reality, which is why his attacks on Obama emphasize
WrightAyresBitterMichelle more than issues. ++
How Obama
Became Acting President
FRANK RICH, NYT
July 27, 2008
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/27/opinion/27rich.html
IT almost seems like a gag worthy of "Borat": A smooth-talking rookie
senator with an exotic name passes himself off as the incumbent American
president to credulous foreigners. But to dismiss Barack Obama's magical mystery
tour through old Europe and two war zones as a media-made fairy tale would be to
underestimate the ingenious politics of the moment. History was on the march
well before Mr. Obama boarded his plane, and his trip was perfectly timed to
reap the whirlwind.
He never would have been treated as a
president-in-waiting by heads of state or network talking heads if all he
offered were charisma, slick rhetoric and stunning visuals. What drew them
instead was the raw power Mr. Obama has amassed: the power to start shaping
events and the power to move markets, including TV ratings. (Even "Access
Hollywood" mustered a 20 percent audience jump by hosting the Obama family.)
Power begets more power, absolutely.
The growing Obama clout derives not
from national polls, where his lead is modest. Nor is it a gift from the press,
which still gives free passes to its old bus mate John McCain. It was laughable
to watch journalists stamp their feet last week to try to push Mr. Obama into
saying he was "wrong" about the surge. More than five years and 4,100 American
fatalities later, they're still not demanding that Mr. McCain admit he was wrong
when he assured us that our adventure in Iraq would be fast, produce little
American "bloodletting" and "be paid for by the Iraqis."
Never mind.
This election remains about the present and the future, where Iraq's $10 billion
a month drain on American pocketbooks and military readiness is just one moving
part in a matrix of national crises stretching from the gas pump to Pakistan.
That's the high-rolling political casino where Mr. Obama amassed the chips he
cashed in last week. The "change" that he can at times wield like a glib
marketing gimmick is increasingly becoming a substantive reality — sometimes
through Mr. Obama's instigation, sometimes by luck. Obama-branded change is
snowballing, whether it's change you happen to believe in or not.
Looking back now, we can see that the fortnight preceding the
candidate's flight to Kuwait was like a sequence in an old movie where wind
blows away calendar pages to announce an epochal plot turn. First, on July 7,
the Iraqi prime minister, Nuri al-Maliki, dissed Bush dogma by raising the
prospect of a withdrawal timetable for our troops. Then, on July 15, Mr. McCain
suddenly noticed that more Americans are dying in Afghanistan than Iraq and
called for more American forces to be sent there. It was a long-overdue
recognition of the obvious that he could no longer avoid: both Robert Gates, the
defense secretary, and Adm. Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, had already called for more American troops to battle the resurgent
Taliban, echoing the policy proposed by Mr. Obama a year ago.
On July 17
we learned that President Bush, who had labeled direct talks with Iran
"appeasement," would send the No. 3 official in the State Department to
multilateral nuclear talks with Iran. Lest anyone doubt that the White House had
moved away from the rigid stand endorsed by Mr. McCain and toward Mr. Obama's, a
former Rumsfeld apparatchik weighed in on The Wall Street Journal's op-ed page:
"Now Bush Is Appeasing Iran."
Within 24 hours, the White House did
another U-turn, endorsing an Iraq withdrawal timetable as long as it was labeled
a "general time horizon." In a flash, as Mr. Obama touched down in Kuwait, Mr.
Maliki approvingly cited the Democratic candidate by name while laying out a
troop-withdrawal calendar of his own that, like Mr. Obama's, would wind down in
2010. On Tuesday, the British prime minister, Gordon Brown, announced a major
drawdown of his nation's troops by early 2009.
But it's not merely the
foreign policy consensus that is shifting Obama-ward. The Texas oilman T. Boone
Pickens has now joined another high-profile McCain supporter, Arnold
Schwarzenegger, in knocking the McCain nostrum that America can drill its way
out of its energy crisis. Mr. Pickens, who financed the Swift-boat campaign
smearing John Kerry in 2004, was thought to be a sugar daddy for similar
assaults against the Democrats this year. Instead, he is underwriting
nonpartisan ads promoting wind power and speaks of how he would welcome Al Gore
as energy czar if there's an Obama administration.
The Obama stampede is
forcing Mr. McCain to surrender on other domestic fronts. After the Democrat ran
ads in 14 states berating chief executives who are "making more in 10 minutes"
than many workers do in a year, a newly populist Mr. McCain began railing
against "corporate greed" — much as he also followed Mr. Obama's example and
belatedly endorsed a homeowners' bailout he had at first opposed.
Given that
Mr. McCain has already used a refitted, hand-me-down Obama campaign slogan ("A
Leader You Can Believe In"), it can't be long before he takes up fist bumps.
They've become the rage among young (nonterrorist) American businessmen,
according to USA Today.
"We have one president at a time," Mr. Obama is
careful to say. True, but the sitting president, a lame duck despised by voters
and shunned by his own party's candidates, now has all the gravitas of Mr.
Cellophane in "Chicago." The opening for a successor arrived prematurely, and
the vacuum had been waiting to be filled. What was most striking about the Obama
speech in Berlin was not anything he said so much as the alternative reality it
fostered: many American children have never before seen huge crowds turn out
abroad to wave American flags instead of burn them.
Mr. McCain could also
have stepped into the leadership gap left by Mr. Bush's de facto abdication. His
inability to even make a stab at doing so is troubling. While drama-queen
commentators on television last week were busy building up false suspense about
the Obama trip — will he make a world-class gaffe? will he have too large an
audience in Germany? — few focused on the alarms that Mr. McCain's behavior at
home raise about his fitness to be president.
Once again the candidate
was making factual errors about the only subject he cares about, imagining an
Iraq-Pakistan border and garbling the chronology of the Anbar Awakening. Once
again he displayed a tantrum-prone temperament ill-suited to a high-pressure
21st-century presidency. His grim-faced crusade to brand his opponent as a
traitor who wants to "lose a war" isn't even a competent impersonation of Joe
McCarthy. Mr. McCain comes off instead like the ineffectual Mr. Wilson, the
retired neighbor perpetually busting a gasket at the antics of pesky little
Dennis the Menace.
The week's most revealing incident occurred on
Wednesday when the new, supposedly improved McCain campaign management finalized
its grand plan to counter Mr. Obama's Berlin speech with a "Mission
Accomplished"-like helicopter landing on an oil rig off Louisiana's coast. The
announcement was posted on politico.com even as any American with a television
could see that Hurricane Dolly was imminent. Needless to say, this bit of
theater was almost immediately "postponed" but not before raising the question
of whether a McCain administration would be just as hapless in anticipating the
next Katrina as the Bush-Brownie storm watch.
When not plotting such
stunts, the McCain campaign whines about its lack of press attention like a
lover jilted for a younger guy. The McCain camp should be careful what it wishes
for. As its relentless goading of Mr. Obama to visit Iraq only ratcheted up
anticipation for the Democrat's triumphant trip, so its insistent demand for
joint town-hall meetings with Mr. Obama and for more televised chronicling of
Mr. McCain's wanderings could be self-inflicted disasters in the making.
Mr. McCain may be most comfortable at town-hall meetings before largely
friendly crowds, but his performance under pressure at this year's G.O.P.
primary debates was erratic. His sound-bite-deep knowledge of the country's No.
1 issue, the economy, is a Gerald Ford train wreck waiting to happen in any
matchup with Mr. Obama that requires focused, time-limited answers rather than
rambling.
During Mr. McCain's last two tours of the Middle East —
conducted without the invasive scrutiny of network anchors — the only news he
generated was his confusion of Sunni with Shia and his embarrassing stroll
through a "safe" Baghdad market with helicopter cover. He should thank his stars
that few TV viewers saw that he was even less at home when walking through a
chaotic Pennsylvania supermarket last week. He inveighed against the price of
milk while reading from a note card and felt the pain of a shopper planted by
the local Republican Party.
The election remains Mr. Obama's to lose,
and he could lose it, whether through unexpected events, his own vanity or a
vice-presidential misfire. But what we've learned this month is that America,
our allies and most likely the next Congress are moving toward Mr. Obama's
post-Iraq vision of the future, whether he reaches the White House or not.
That's some small comfort as we contemplate the strange alternative offered by
the Republicans: a candidate so oblivious to our nation's big challenges ahead
that he is doubling down in his campaign against both Mr. Maliki and Mr. Obama
to be elected commander in chief of the surge. ++
No
cliffhanger, more like an Obama landslide
Sidney Morning
Herald
July 28, 2008
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2008/07/27/1217097059908.html
Luckily for the Republican nominee John McCain Europeans can't vote in
the November US presidential election - just 100 days away. If they could it
would be a landslide for the Democratic candidate, Barack
Obama.
Nevertheless Senator McCain has reason to be worried - very
worried. Last week three leading political scientists declared the US media's
presentation of the election as a toss-up as a "myth".
Alan Abramowitz, a
professor of political science at Emory University, Thomas Mann, a senior fellow
at Brookings Institution, and Larry Sabato, professor of politics at University
of Virginia, accused the media of flogging a dead horse in trying to portray the
presidential race as a cliffhanger.
It was a particularly bold call for
Professor Sabato, who has previously cautioned about Senator Obama's claims that
he can redraw the political map in America.
"While no election outcome
is guaranteed and McCain's prospects could improve over the next 3½ months,
virtually all of the evidence that we have reviewed - historical patterns,
structural features of this election cycle, and national and state polls
conducted over the last several months - point to a comfortable Obama/Democratic
Party victory in November," the three men wrote in Sabato's Crystal Ball
newsletter.
--"Trumpeting this race as a toss-up, almost certain to
produce another nail-biter finish, distorts the evidence and does a disservice
to readers and viewers who rely upon such punditry. Again, maybe conditions will
change in McCain's favour, and if they do, they should also be accurately
described by the media. But current data do not justify calling this election a
toss-up."
The trio reviewed the national tracking polls and found that
Senator Obama has led Senator McCain in every national poll in the past two
months, except for twice early on when they tied.
Senator Obama's margin
has been in the 4-6 point range, in contrast to the polls in the election
run-ups in 2000 and 2004 which showed much more variation over time, they
said.
The state-by-state polls have also consistently given Senator Obama
an advantage.
"Obama is leading in every state carried by John Kerry in
2004 along with six states carried by George Bush: Iowa, New Mexico, Ohio,
Indiana, Nevada and Colorado. A seventh Bush state, Virginia, is tied," they
wrote.
But there are other worrying signs for Senator McCain.
A
Fox News Poll found that 51 per cent of Americans think Senator Obama will win.
Only 27 per cent pick Senator McCain (from 32 per cent last
month).
There's no doubt Senator Obama has run a campaign with few
stumbles, apart from his serious mishandling of the Reverend Jeremiah Wright
issue. That's been achieved by keeping a safe distance from media questioning,
keeping the images tightly controlled and focusing on reassuring voters about
his weaknesses, for instance, his national security
credentials.
Meanwhile, Senator Obama is making headway with the
demographics that commentators warned would be difficult - and which conversely
offered an opportunity for Senator McCain.
A Pew Hispanic Centre poll
released last Thursday shows overwhelming support from Latinos for Senator Obama
- 66 per cent versus 23 per cent favouring Senator McCain.
On Super
Tuesday, Senator Obama received only 38 per cent of the Latino vote, while
former rival Hillary Clinton received 58 per cent, CNN exit polling
showed.
Senator McCain is facing a particularly hostile political
environment. The war remains deeply unpopular in the US, although support for
the surge has risen somewhat as its impact becomes clearer. The economic news
just gets worse, and Senator McCain is struggling to distinguish his economic
remedies from those of George Bush. He is also struggling to convince
Republicans he is their man.
Polling data continues to show that
Democrats are more satisfied with their party's nominee than Republican voters
and more highly motivated to vote. While Republicans normally benefit from
higher turnout among their supporters, that may not be the case this
year.
There was a ray of hope for Senator McCain last week with a
Quinnipiac/Washington Post poll showing him ahead in Colorado by 1 per cent,
reversing Senator Obama's lead in the last two polls. More implausibly, a
Rasmussen poll had Senator McCain ahead again, by 10 points. in Ohio, where
Senator Obama has enjoyed a solid lead in the last two polls.
The issue
still remains for Senator Obama whether he can overcome what some fear is a
deep-seated racist reserve about him in middle America.
++
bonus
Three States
Accused of Illegally Purging Voter Lists
The states are swapping data files
to find duplicate names, but civil rights attorneys say they are not following
federal law to remove them.
Steven Rosenfeld, AlterNet
July 25,
2008
http://tinyurl.com/5gc96q
Election officials in a handful of states appear to be ignoring the
federal law dictating the way registered voters may be purged from voter rolls,
civil rights attorneys say.
National voting rights groups have contacted
officials in Kansas, Michigan and Louisiana in recent weeks because those states
appear to be purging registered voters after election officials found duplicate
names and birthdays of people on their voter lists and in out-of-state
databases, such as driver's license records.
The states are assuming that
a more recent driver's license or voter registration in another state indicates
that the voter has relocated, meaning the voter registration tied to their prior
address is no longer valid. While purging voters who move, die or are imprisoned
is a routine part of managing elections, the federal law governing purges -- the
National Voter Registration Act -- lays out a multiyear process of trying to
contact voters to confirm a change of address before deleting them from voter
rolls.
The election attorneys say the NVRA process seeks to err on the
side of protecting voting rights and cannot be circumvented by what appears to
be a duplicate voter registration.
"The National Voter Registration Act
(NVRA) limits the circumstances in which a state may cancel a voter's
registration," the Fair Elections Legal Network, a Washington-based voting
rights consortium, said in a June 24 letter to Kansas Secretary of State Ron
Thornburgh. "The NVRA does not permit cancellation based on a match
alone."
"We are looking at several statewide purge issues," said Bradley
Heard, a senior attorney with Advancement Project, a voting rights law firm. He
said that in Michigan, both data matching and mailings by local officials to
verify a voter's registration information were of concern. "We are also looking
at a state law that calls for purging a bunch of voter registration records that
are otherwise eligible."
But state election officials in these three
states disagree with the voting rights groups, offering different explanations
that suggest existing state laws or election management practices pre-empt the
NVRA.
"We follow the state law that was adopted by our state
Legislature," said Jacques Berry, press secretary for Louisiana Secretary of
State Jay Dardenne, a Republican. "It supersedes the NVRA."
"There is a
section of the NVRA that they (the voting rights lawyers) interpret differently
than we do," said Brad Bryant, Kansas deputy secretary of state. "It has been
this way for 15 years."
Kelly Chesney, spokeswoman for Michigan Secretary
of State Terri Lynn Land, did not reply to requests to
comment.
Voting Rights Groups Target Purges
Last
week, Project Vote, which is working in two dozen states to register voters in
2008, sent a letter to Dardenne saying his state appeared to be ignoring
sections of the NVRA that require that voters be notified by mail over two
federal election cycles before being removed. Project Vote's attorney said
Louisiana Commissioner of Elections Angie LaPlace was treating apparently
duplicate database listings as "cases of suspected fraud or some other
irregularity."
Last year, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund sued Louisiana
over the purging of registrations of refugees from Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
Many people who applied for a driver's license in a neighboring state -- to
quickly acquire an ID after losing their belongings in the storms -- also were
registered to vote without their knowledge, NAACP attorneys said. Those new
voter registrations resulted in 21,000 voters being removed from Louisiana voter
rolls last August, the group said.
While the NAACP suit was dismissed,
Project Vote's recent letter suggests the state's voter list maintenance
practices have not changed. Project Vote also wrote to the U.S. Department of
Justice about the matter, as the agency oversees federal elections in most
Southern states as a result of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Louisiana
election officials disagreed with Project Vote's assessment, saying the state
has its own voter purge process that "supersedes" the federal law. Berry, the
secretary of state's spokesman, explained that Louisiana updates its voter roll
annually with multiple mailings to voters so the lists are accurate in state
elections -- not just federal contests. He said that process is more rigorous
than that outlined in the federal NVRA, requiring, for instance, that voters
reaffirm their Louisiana voter registrations in person after receiving a final
state notice. Berry said the process was approved by the Department of
Justice.
"What we find is in the vast majority of cases the voter has
moved out of Louisiana and registered in another state, not realizing that they
will not automatically cancel their voter registration," he said.
The
issue of whether states are heeding the National Voter Registration Act reveals
how the implementation of the nation's election laws often turns on a patchwork
of local or state policies. In the absence of litigation, whether a state or
election jurisdiction is following the NVRA often remains a question of local
interpretation.
In Madison County, Mississippi, county supervisors this
week rescinded a plan to send a mass mailing to voters, where returned postcards
were to be used to purge voters over a two-year period. In this instance,
Project Vote notified county officials that its timetable would violate the
NVRA, and, according to local news reports, the county's supervisors decided to
abandon the plan and instead prepare for a high-turnout election in the
fall.
"The mildest things confuse people and can ultimately
disenfranchise people during elections," Madison County Supervisor Karl Banks
said in a Clarion Ledger report.
"Here we are willing to disenfranchise
people because they don't send a card back?"
In Kansas, Bryant, the
deputy assistant secretary of state, said his state has an established practice
of comparing its voter rolls with databases from neighboring states to identify
people who have moved. He said Kansas has a "memorandum of understanding" with
11 states to share databases that can be used to clean up voter files. Those
states are Missouri, Nebraska, Iowa, Minnesota, South Dakota, Texas, Arkansas,
Ohio, Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona.
Bryant said statewide election
data has improved in recent years, facilitating the job of updating voter rolls.
The federal Help America Vote Act, passed in 2002 after Florida's presidential
election debacle, required states to consolidate county or municipal voter rolls
into statewide lists. Bryant said the new statewide lists have created "certain
data elements" that can be compared with other states, such as driver's license
data.
"All the comparisons do is create a list of possible matches in
each state," Bryant said, adding that it is then up to each state to decide how
it treats that information for purge purposes.
The attorneys for the
voting rights groups agree to a point, saying vote list maintenance in itself is
an important and necessary goal. However, the attorneys and states disagree
about what should come after the matches are discovered -- whether to
immediately purge voters or to follow the NVRA process of sending postcards to
voters over two federal election cycles to verify their residence and
registration information.
Bryant said he did not know how many registered
voters had been removed in 2008 using his state's data-matching
process.
Michigan's Secretive Approach
In
Michigan, the issues are more complex. Advancement Project's Heard said there
has been an overall lack of "transparency" regarding several aspects of the
state's voter purge process. In 2006, he said, Michigan election officials did a
statewide mailing to all voters that did not mention the mailing would be used
to verify voter registration information. Still, Heard said the returned
postcards were used to remove 230,000 registered voters from voter rolls within
90 days of that year's general election, which also violates the NVRA, he
said.
Jan BenDor, statewide coordinator for the Michigan Election Defense
Alliance, a local voting rights group, said state officials cited an April 2007
letter from the Department of Justice pressuring the state to do more to clean
up its voter roll for the statewide mailing and August 2006 purge. Ten states
received those letters, which critics said was a political move because the
claims of sloppy voter rolls was based on outdated data, notably U.S. Census
population estimates.
Since the 2006 purge, Michigan has used driver's
license databases from other states to identify another 280,000 names as
apparent duplicate voter registrations, Heard said. This month, staffers for
Michigan Secretary of State Land, a Republican, canceled a meeting with Heard
and Michigan activists to discuss purge issues.
"We have been trying to
get a meeting with election officials to talk about the issues and get their
explanation," Heard said. "It's hard to say what happened with the 280,000
supposed out-of-state movers, since we can't get the info from the
state."
Land's spokeswoman, Chesney, did not respond to requests to
comment. However, newspapers in Michigan have quoted Chesney as saying the
meeting was canceled when an information session appeared to be a precursor to
litigation. Heard said Advancement Project has not ruled out filing a
lawsuit.
"We have to evaluate all of our options," he said. "We are
hoping the secretary of state's staff will sit down and talk about
it."
Purge Issues Not Going Away
The purge issue
is only going to rise in profile in the coming weeks. Several voting rights
groups are studying the process in a number of swing states and hope to issue
reports later this summer. Among the issues being studied is the accuracy of the
database matches used to purge voters. When California first implemented a
data-matching program in 2006, some counties had error rates as high as 40
percent, meaning a registered voter who appeared to have moved would have been
incorrectly purged without further efforts to confirm their residency and voter
registration status. ++
Obama Doesn't Sweat. He
should.
Greg Palast
http://www.gregpalast.com/obama-doesn%E2%80%99t-sweat-he-should/
In swing-state Colorado, the Republican Secretary of State
conducted the biggest purge of voters in history, dumping a fifth of all
registrations. Guess their color.
In swing-state Florida, the state is
refusing to accept about 85,000 new registrations from voter drives –
overwhelming Black voters.
In swing state New Mexico, HALF of the
Democrats of Mora, a dirt poor and overwhelmingly Hispanic county, found their
registrations disappeared this year, courtesy of a Republican voting contractor.
In swing states Ohio and Nevada, new federal law is knocking out tens of
thousands of voters who lost their homes to foreclosure.
My
investigations partner spoke directly to Barack Obama about it. (When your
partner is Robert F. Kennedy Jr., candidates take your phone call.) The cool,
cool Senator Obama told Kennedy he was "concerned" about the integrity of the
vote in the Southwest in particular.
He's concerned. I'm
sweating.
It's time SOMEBODY raised the alarm about these missing voters;
not to save Obama's candidacy – journalists should stay the heck away from
partisan endorsements - but raise the alarm to save our sick
democracy.
And that somebody is YOU. Joining with US, the Palast
investigative team. Here's how:
We have been offered an astonishing
opportunity to place the Kennedy-Palast investigative findings on a national,
prime-time, major-network television broadcast. Plus, separately, we have an
extraordinary offer to create a series of reports for national network
radio.
But guess what? The networks will NOT PAY for our public service
reports. We have to raise the start-up funds in the next two weeks to film it,
record it and get it on the airwaves.
WE need YOU to fund the reports,
DISSEMINATE the findings as we post the print, audio and video on the web– and
ACT on it.
So, for only the second time this year, I am asking each one
of you to make a tax deductible donation to the non-profit, non-partisan Palast
Investigative Fund of $500, $150 or $100.
Progressives have complained
for years of no opportunity to get the hard, cold sweaty truth on the air. Well,
put your money where your heart and soul is.
Donate at least $500, I'll
send you every book I've written and every film, signed.
Send $150 and I'll
send you as a gift, a copy of John Ennis' film Free For All, the brilliant and
funny film about the Theft of Ohio. AND I'll send you, signed, a copy of my
book, Armed Madhouse, plus a copy of the BBC/Democracy Now film investigations,
The Election Files and a copy of the spoken word CD Live from the Armed Madhouse
all signed.
Donate $100, and I'll send you 3 copies, one signed to you,
of "The Elections Files, " the best of our BBC/Democracy Now films – including
special never-broadcast interviews with Kennedy and fired prosecutor David
Iglesias.
I know you're ponying up for your favorite candidates. But
what's the point of winning folks' votes IF NO ONE COUNTS THEM?
Please
make your donation – today. No corporation, no big foundation, is going to take
on this emergency in our democracy. The election's about to be stolen – for a
third time. SO WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT?
Donate today (for
$1,000 minimum, we'll list you as a Producer of our next DVD, in gratitude).
Why? Because the only way to get the vote-chewing cockroaches out of the voting
machinery is to turn on the lights – tell the truth on them. On prime
time.
After our team busted the story of Katherine Harris' attack on
innocent Black voters as "felons," the NAACP sued and won back their rights. The
truth CAN make the difference. Yes, we can. Indeed, we HAVE.
Think all
votes should be counted in America? Then YOU stand up and be counted. Don't
expect networks or commercial sponsors to pay for your democracy. Feed the
truth, donate $100 right now and pass on a copy of the Elections Files to your
dippy cousin who thinks Kerry lost fair and square.
Donations from our
prior and only request already paid for some of our filming in the Southwest.
Don't let this story be swept under the border.
If you want more
information, go to GregPalast.com, or write me directly at GregPalast.com – and
hit the button, "contact Greg."
Pass this on! ++
Rove
Threat to Blackmail GOP IT Mastermind Triggers Immunity Request to Ohio AG by
Election Lawyers
GOP Threatens "Valerie Plame" Style Strike Against Wife
of IT Mastermind if He Doesn't Become Fall Guy for Gaming the 2004 Ohio
Election
John Michael Spinelli, ePluribus Media
http://thejournal.epluribusmedia.net/index.php/state-news/ohio-news/34-ohio-news/127-rove-threat-to-blackmail-gop-it-mastermind-triggers-immunity-request-to-ohio-ag-by-election-lawyers
OhioNewsBureau - COLUMBUS, OHIO: The little story about how the GOP
cyber-gamed the Ohio presidential election in 2004 is growing by the day,
spurred on to greater heights Thursday when an Ohio election attorney asked the
Ohio Attorney General to provide immunity protection to Mike Connell, the GOP IT
mastermind who built various computer systems they say not only won Ohio for
President Bush in 2004 but led to many other wins for Republicans over the years
of the Bush Administration.
A key figure in the grand strategy of the
Grand Old Party to build a cyber system that could assure permanent control by
Republicans of key offices, state and federal, is Mike Connell, an Ohio native
some refer to as a "High IQ Forrest Gump" for his brilliance in masterminding
the construction of various computer systems associated with election procedures
and data security, including the so-called firewall in Congress.
Ohio Attorney General Asked to Protect Key Witness in Election
Fraud Case
In an email sent to OhioNewsBureau by lead attorney Cliff Arnebeck, who
filed a federal lawsuit in August 2006 asserting the GOP gamed the system and
won the state by suppressing the votes of various progressive-leaning groups
like students and African Americans and who wants to revive the case to protect
the integrity of the 2008 election, Nancy H. Rogers, the former dean of the law
school at The Ohio State University and interim Attorney General, was asked to
provide immunity protection services to Connell.
The immunity request
from Arnebeck to the Ohio AG was triggered by information from a confidential
source that Karl Rove, a kingpin GOP strategist, threatened that if Mike Connell
doesn't go in the tank for cyber-rigging the 2004 election in Ohio, his wife
will be sued for lobbying law violations. Using this kind of hardball tactic to
rain retribution down on an individual for not allowing himself to be "thrown
under the bus" smacks of the identical retaliation tactic used to punish Valerie
Plame by outing her as a spy for remarks made by her husband Joe Wilson before
the commencement of the war in Iraq that no evidence existed for uranium being
sold by Niger to Saddam Hussein.
In an email to the General Mukasey at
US Dept. of Justice, Arnebeck said "We have been confidentially informed by a
source we believe to be credible that Karl Rove has threatened Michael Connell,
a principal witness we have identified in our King Lincoln case in federal court
in Columbus, Ohio, that if he does not agree to "take the fall" for election
fraud in Ohio, his wife Heather will be prosecuted for supposed lobby law
violations. This appears to be in response to our designation of Rove as the
principal perpetrator in the Ohio Corrupt Practices Act/RICO claim with respect
to which we issued document hold notices last Thursday to you and to the US
Chamber of Commerce Institute for Legal Reform."
Continuing,
Arnebeck said, "I have informed court chambers and am in the process of
informing the Ohio Attorney General's and US Attorney's offices in Columbus for
the purpose, among other things, of seeking protection for Mr. Connell and his
family from this reported attempt to intimidate a witness.
"Concurrently
herewith, I am informing Mr. Conyers and Mr. Kucinich in connection with their
Congressional oversight responsibilities related to these matters.
"Because of the serious engagement in this matter that began in 2000 of
the Ohio Statehouse Press Corps, 60 Minutes, the New York Times, Wall Street
Journal, C-Span and Jim VandeHei, and the public's right to know of gross
attempts to subvert the rule of law, I am forwarding this information to them,
as well."
In an exclusive interview with OhioNewsBureau, Arnebeck
said he expects to meet in person next week with attorneys in the Ohio AG's
office on his request for immunity filed today. For information on the
King-Lincoln lawsuit, go here. Stressing that his aim is to enhance his lawsuit
of 2006, Arnebeck said, "I'm not >trying to screw things up. I want to help
not hinder."
Asked what other offices could play a role, if they chose,
in his campaign to unravel the Matrix behind what he and computer experts like
Stephen Spoonamore say is going on but no one has yet to prove exists, Arnebeck
said the Office of Ohio Secretary of State, the chief of elections, could use
its legal authority to interrogate Connell, or initiate her own inquiry into the
matter if she wants to hold off on the federal case. Arnebeck said Judge Algenon
Marbley, who's in charge of his case, has had members of his staff informally
informed of the direction Arnebeck and his co-counsel, Bob Fitrakis, want to
take the case along with their request to recover various emails of Karl Rove
and the US Chamber of Commerce they feel makes their case.
"We want to
cooperate," Arnebeck said in a telephone interview today, about working with all
offices on finding the truth behind efforts to build an effective but
undetectable system that tilts close elections to Republicans.
Rove Alleged to Issue Blackmail Threat to Wife of GOP IT
Mastermind
Arnebeck was especially concerned that Connell's wife
would be slapped with a GOP lawsuit alleging violations of lobbying laws if Mike
Connell didn't fall on his sword as the person responsible for building the
system. "If this is true about Connell's wife, we want to do everything to make
sure every witness will be protected against any such threat," said Arnebeck,
who added that if Connell feels threatened by Rove threatening to go after his
wife on a criminal basis, he might not talk to House Judiciary Committee as he
once said he might do but instead will seek out defense counsel.
"Intimidating a witness in a federal case is a serious crime,"
Arnebeck said of his assertion that Rove has indeed made threats to Connell in
this regard. Other sources familiar with the case say Arnebeck's concerns are
justified by people who would know but who cannot identify themselves for fear
they could suffer similar threats or attacks on them Arnebeck said Ben Espy and
Damian Sikora of the Ohio AG's office are in receipt of his request.
For a view of the full letter authored by Arnebeck, check out this link
at ePluribus Media. For links to more background on this developing detective
story about the alleged subversion of law by Rove, the GOP and Connell, check it
out here. The Bradblog covers it as does the Velvet
Revolution.
OhioNewsBureau sent an email to the Office of Ohio Attorney
General seeking a response about whether the office was in receipt of Arnebeck's
request, confirming his statement to ONB that it had, what authority the office
has to provide protection to Connell and members of his family and whether
General Rogers was prepared to direct her agency to help in any matter. At the
time this story was posted, no response was received from the Ohio Attorney
General.
Blackwell Tells House Judiciary Committee Bi-Partisan
Election System Ultimate Deterrent to Conspiracy Theories
In a
related but separate story, J. Kenneth Blackwell, Ohio Secretary of State for
the 2004 general election, testified before the House Judiciary Committee today.
Blackwell was questioned by Chairman John Conyers, who was on Arnebeck's list of
recipients, about charges that the election, under his watch, was severely
flawed.
As reported by The Columbus Dispatch, Blackwell told Conyers and
committee members that Ohio's 88 county boards of election are all run by both
Democrats and Republicans. He said local officials decide on the distribution
ratios for voting equipment, the location of polling stations and select the
voting equipment used in their counties from lists of equipment certified by the
secretary of state's office, the Dispatch reported. In the report, Blackwell
said, "All these local safeguards ensure that local concerns about access to
polling stations are handled locally and that both parties have a say in the
final decisions."
When Mr. Spoonamore, the cyber security expert Arnebeck
has enlisted as a key witness and whose professional paths have crossed those of
Connell, was asked a week ago whether the explanation that elections couldn't be
cyber stolen because they are run by two major parties, as Blackwell told the
House Judiciary committee as an air-tight reason why conspiracy is only a
reality in the mind of conspiratists, Spoonamore said with great emphasis that
none of the board of election members, Republican or Democrat, or their staff
wouldn't have a clue that the election-system Matrix set up by pros like Connell
was at work, undetectable to anyone, not the least of which would be board
members who have no expertise in the software underlying the system they think
they're running. No one has really probed the voter database software that
touch-screen vendors bundle in with the equipment each county purchases for
them, failing to understand that vendor technicians, who come and go with no
checks on them, could tilt the playing field of elections is so directed by
their superiors, who are not any of the people who believe they are in control
of the system. ++
Arizona Activists Outline Evidence of 2006
Electronic Vote Theft
The attorney who won the country's first case declaring
electronic voting records are public now summarizes the case for vote count
fraud.
Bill Risner, Election Defense Alliance
July 22,
2008
Editor's
Note: Electronic vote count fraud is very hard to prove. Yet for several years,
a group of election integrity activists and Democratic Party officials in
Tuscon, Arizona, have made as much progress as anyone in the country. At issue
was a 2006 regional transit bond vote that was behind in pre-election polls but
won on Election Day. Attorney Bill Risner, the Pima County Democratic Party, and
AuditAZ, an election integrity group, sued and won the release of the vote's
electronic records. That established for the first time in the country that such
data was a public record. Now Risner and the activists have a sworn confession
from a whistleblower who says he was told the transit bond vote count was
altered and much related evidence. In this recent letter to Arizona Attorney
General Terry Goddard, Risner asks the state to reopen its own investigation and
recount the 2006 ballots.
[open link for
article]
http://www.politicalwaves.net
"So keep fightin'
for freedom and justice, beloveds, but don't you forget to have fun doin' it.
Lord, let your laughter ring forth. Be outrageous, ridicule the fraidy-cats,
rejoice in all the oddities that freedom can produce. And when you get through
kickin' ass and celebratin' the sheer joy of a good fight, be sure to tell those
who come after how much fun it was."
~ Molly Ivins, 1944 -
2007
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