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Minorities Won't Let Vote Suppressors Get Off Scott Free | Andrew J. Skerritt

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Minorities Won't Let Vote Suppressors Get Off Scott Free | Andrew J. Skerritt

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Minorities Won't Let Vote Suppressors Get Off Scott Free
Thursday, June 14, 2012 — Andrew J. Skerritt

It’s obvious that Gov. Rick Scott is bent on discouraging minority voters from heading to the polls. The presidential election might be close this fall. Scott doesn’t want to leave anything to chance.

The governor has ordered Secretary of State Ken Detzner to purge voter rolls of people who are not citizens. In pursuit of this purge, the secretary of state has been naming names and has gotten hundreds of them wrong.  Thankfully, the supervisors of elections – Republican and Democrat – stopped the purge. And if that doesn’t work, the U.S Justice Department is trying to put a stop to it.

This fight is about the past and the future. You have to look at this episode through the lens of the 2000 presidential election, when between 12,000 and 22,000 eligible voters were denied their constitutional right to vote because they were labeled as felons.

Former Gov. Jeb Bush went after felons again in 2004, but somehow his list only included African Americans, not Hispanics.

In Tallahassee, where I live, Leon County Supervisor of Elections Ion Sancho said four ineligible voters were on the list of eight names sent by the state. All four had stated clearly on the forms that they were non-citizens, but had been incorrectly registered by the state anyway. None had tried to vote.

Statewide, the governor says 140 people have been identified as non-citizens and about 50 may have unlawfully voted. He talks less about the more than 500 citizens who’ve had to prove they were wrongly targeted, or the hundreds more who may not know they’ve been falsely accused until they show up to vote.

Scott said he’s simply trying to protect the rights of the majority of Florida voters and make sure their voting power isn’t diluted by fraud.

Sounds noble enough. But now we know that Detzner’s predecessor, Kurt Browning, refused to go along with Scott’s wishes because he didn't trust the list. He quit, so the governor went looking for a lackey who would do his bidding.

This initiative has nothing to with protecting the rights of the majority and stopping voter fraud. It has everything to do with winning elections. 

This effort to purge the rolls is part of the state Republican game plan for election reform. After witnessing long lines of blacks willing to stand in line day after day to vote for a presidential candidate Republicans despised, legislators responded to the 2008 election by reducing the number of days for early voting. They also passed a law to hamstring the voter registration efforts of progressive groups more likely to sign up non-GOP leaning voters. Thankfully, the federal courts stepped in.

This is not just another rant about GOP voter suppression. This is a call to action. Minority voters shouldn’t let the faux guardians of our election system get off Scott free. The only appropriate response is to vote. It’s imperative.

“For many, it’s a privilege to vote. For those of us of color, it’s a duty, a solemn duty,” said Dale Landry, president of the Tallahassee NAACP branch. He talks about that “strange fruit’’ hanging from the trees. We don’t need to get graphic, but we can’t afford to forget.

The Voting Rights Act of 1965 ensured black voters in the South access to the polls. Access came at a price. Men and women died for even daring to talk about voting.  

Their sacrifice was not in vain. If President Obama’s victory in 2008 would have been impossible without the Voting Rights Act, then Florida’s “election reform” is designed to make sure he’s not re-elected.

Yes, this voting thing is serious business. Too many people paid too high a price for us to be deterred by small politicians with small agendas. So let them try. It’s going to take more than intimidation to keep us from voting in November.

Andrew J. Skerritt is an assistant professor of journalism at Florida A&M University and the author of Ashamed to Die: Silence, Denial and the AIDS Epidemic in the South. He can be reached at askerritt@floridavoices.com. Follow him on twitter at andrewjskerrit

 

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You sir are part of the problem, not part of the solution. Why waste this space and time inciting mis-truths?

I am sure you are aware of the real facts, but choose instead to throw this "opinion" out there with nothing close to the facts. When will the desire to be lawful, and protecting real voters take precedence over hype?

I guess for you and other libs, it's OK that dead people, felons, illegal aliens and other non-qualified persons can vote? The State of Florida has been asking Homeland Security for almost a year for the alien database to disqualify non citizens - Homeland Security has not provided it, even though the State is entitled to it BY LAW.

Without this clearing of the voter list, your vote, my vote and every other legitimate voter's vote is worth less. Who wants that?

AND even if there is a question about citizenship, they can still vote with a provisional ballot. The only MINORITIES they are trying to dissuade from voting are those that should not be voting in the first place. But I guess "you people" don't care if only those who can vote, should vote.

You sir, are on the wrong side of this issue!

Enough already! What is the problem with making sure that people who vote are not cheating? Especially after the widespread ACORN fraud from 3 1/2 years ago.

Your article is a pathetic, obvious attempt to trump up your base.

Why aren't you as outraged that the New Black Panthers stood at the polls intimidating white voters while the Obama DOJ refuses to do anything about it?

To claim that ensuring voting integrity is racially or politically motivated is a classic Sal Alinsky tactic. You seem to see racism everywhere and in everything and create a crisis just to gin up your base.

A lot of white people too died to defend the right for blacks to vote. The system must be free of fraud if it is to work. That is WHY anyone who genuinely cares would welcome weeding out the cheaters (black and white).

If our goverment cannot assure the integrity of the elections our entire system will fail. Maybe you would like that.