John McCain's Voter Suppression
Committee<http://oxdown.firedoglake.com/diary/752>By:
Ari <http://oxdown.firedoglake.com/diary/author/6182/> Wednesday October 15,
2008 7:02 am  *86*
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it*<http://digg.com/submit?url=http%3A%2F%2Foxdown.firedoglake.com%2Fdiary%2F752&title=John+McCain%E2%80%99s+Voter+Suppression+Committee&bodytext=John+McCain%E2%80%99s+Voter+Suppression+Committee>

Nearly a quarter of John McCain's "Clean Election and Voter Fraud
Committee," chaired by Warren Rudman and John Danforth, have been involved
in GOP voter suppression efforts or unfounded partisan claims of voter
fraud. Of the 21 members of the committee, five have been engaging in these
shady efforts.

 It's no surprise that Republicans engage in voter fraud. Watch what
happened last week when "Clean Election and Voter Fraud Committee," member
Tom Davis tells an audience of reporters at the National Press Club last
week that Republicans don't suppress votes. The reaction? They laughed!  A
lot!

In addition to Davis, who has a history of openly discussing subtle voter
suppression techniques, the committee includes

   - Cameron Quinn, who was a director of the Republican voter suppression
   front group, the American Center for Voting Rights.
   - California Secretary of State Bill Jones, who has long fought for ways
   to make it more difficult for people to vote.
   - Susan Molinari who cried wolf about voter fraud in 2004 and 2006, only
   to find her allegations proven false.
   - Larry D. Thompson ho hired Bradley Schlozman to work in the Justice
   Department where he approved Tom Delay's redistricting plan, GA's modern
   "Jim Crow Law" and pursued politicized indictments against ACORN in MO.

Details below the fold.

*Tom Davis*

Just last week Davis admitted to engaging in subtle voter suppression
techniques *10/10/08* <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4dZmDHeEcnA>:

 I think it's fair to say, yeah, I think it's fair to say we're not going to
spend any money educating them on what they need to do but that's what you
do in these kinds of elections… I'm just saying in terms of vulnerability of
our congressional candidates, you've got to look at these high African
American voter urban style districts and recognize that it's not business as
usual as a candidate, that you're going to deal with an electorate that is
significantly different from what you see in off years. And I just think
that's the fact.

It's no surprise, Tom Davis has encouraged vote suppression before. The
Native American newspaper, *The Circle reported on November 30, 2004*,

 In 2004, after a Democratic candidate won a special Congressional election
in South Dakota, the power of the Native American voting block was expressed
by the former chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee
Rep. Tom Davis (R-Va.), 'If you take out the Indian reservation, we would
have won.'… Unfortunately, as the Native voting population turns out in
larger numbers, attention to their voting influence can also attract efforts
to discourage them on Election Day. One of the most common tactics employed
in recent elections has been the challenging of Natives' voting status by
poll watchers on Election Day."

*Cameron Quinn*

Cameron Quinn, was a director of the American Center for Voting Rights that
according to McClatchy <http://www.mcclatchydc.com/130/story/17532.html>,
deployed resources "deployed in battleground states to press for restrictive
ID laws and oversee balloting."

In addition Slate <http://www.slate.com/id/2166589/pagenum/all/>
reported, <http://www.slate.com/id/2166589/pagenum/all/>

 ACVR's method of argument followed a familiar line, first set out by Wall
Street Journal columnist John Fund in his book, Stealing Elections. First,
ACVR argued extensively by anecdote, pointing to instances of illegal
conduct, such as someone, somewhere registering Mary Poppins to vote.
Anecdote would then be coupled with statistics showing problems with voter
rolls not being purged to remove voters who had died or moved, leaving open
the potential for fraudulent voting at the polls. Finally, the group would
claim that the amount of such voter fraud is hard to quantify, because it is
after all illegal conduct, hidden from the public. Given this great
potential for mischief, and without evidence of actual mischief, allegedly
reasonable initiatives such as purging voter rolls and requiring ID seemed
the natural solution.

Sound familiar? The article
<http://www.slate.com/id/2166589/pagenum/all/>also point out:

 cachet would be used to support the passage of onerous voter-identification
laws that depress turnout among the poor, minorities, and the elderly—groups
more likely to vote Democratic. Where the Bush administration may have
failed to nail illegal voters, the effort to suppress minority voting has
borne more fruit, as more states pass these laws, and courts begin to uphold
them in the name of beating back waves of largely imaginary voter fraud."
The article notes: "the group would claim that the amount of such voter
fraud is hard to quantify, because it is after all illegal conduct, hidden
from the public. Given this great potential for mischief, and without
evidence of actual mischief, allegedly reasonable initiatives such as
purging voter rolls and requiring ID seemed the natural solution.

*Bill Jones *

Jones according to the LA
Times<http://articles.latimes.com/1998/jan/18/news/mn-9593>:


 has advocated an anti-fraud program that includes calling for citizen
naturalization numbers and Social Security numbers on registration
documents, as well as requiring some form of identification at the time of
voting. Reached later in the day, Jones said he supports changes in federal
law to permit the monitoring of those who register and vote, but is
concerned about the poll-watcher proposal. 'There is nothing inherently
wrong with poll watchers as long as it does not cross the fine line to
intimidation as happened with the poll guards' in 1988 in Orange County,
Jones said.

In addition according to the *San Francisco Chronicle* on 11/1/99:

 Jones wants to have people put the number of their driver's license or
California identification card on their voter registration card and show
some type of ID before they can vote…That proposal has gone nowhere in the
state Legislature, which is reluctant to do anything that could discourage
people from casting a ballot. 'There's a need to strike a balance between
accessibility and security,' Charles said. 'But right now, voting is
extremely accessible, but with holes in its security that could lead to
fraud.'

*Susan Molinari*

Molinari has a long history of crying wolf about voter fraud.

According to House Congressional
testimony<http://gop.cha.house.gov/hearings/Testimony.aspx?TID=941>,
Molinari, who chaired the Commission on Federal Election Reform, alleged the
close victory for John Kerry in the 2004 Presidential race in Wisconsin was
due to "illegal votes," citing the joint task force led by U.S. Attorney
Steve Biskupic. However, according to the *Milwaukee
Sentinel-Journal*<http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=375572>,
the "nearly yearlong investigation into voter fraud in 2004 has yielded no
evidence of a broad conspiracy to try to steal an election, U.S. Attorney
Steve Biskupic said."

And according to House Congressional
Testimony<http://gop.cha.house.gov/hearings/Testimony.aspx?TID=941>,
as a Federal Election Reform Commissioner, Molinari argued "that states
should adopt photo identification requirements because the Washington race
was 'decided by illegal votes' and that 'this fact was established by a
lengthy trial and decision of the court.'"

However, a Superior Court decision in Washington State
<http://www.seattleweekly.com/content/printVersion/165891>found no evidence
of voter fraud, declaring,

 While there is evidence of irregularity, as there appears to be in every
election, based on the testimony of various county election officials, there
is no substantial evidence by clear and convincing evidence that improper
conduct or irregularity procured Ms. Gregoire's election to the Office of
Governor.

*Larry Thompson*

Larry Thompson gave Bradley Schlozman his job at the Justice Department.

According to the *New York
Times*<http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/opinion/10thu1.html>,
Bradley Schlozman

 "made his name in the Bush administration by helping to turn the department
away from its historic commitment to protecting the voting rights of
minorities. Mr. Schlozman was one of the political appointees who approved
Tom DeLay's Texas redistricting plan and Georgia's voter ID law, over the
objection of career lawyers on the staff, who insisted that both violated
the Voting Rights Act."

Salon 
reported<http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2007/03/21/us_attorneys/print.html>:


 "Less than a week before the 2006 midterm election, in which Missouri was
the scene of one of the year's tightest Senate contests, Schlozman announced
the indictment of four people for voter fraud. […] The indictments were
trumpeted by myriad conservative blogs and such national outlets as Fox
News, the Wall Street Journal and the Washington Times. More than four
months after he announced them -- and after incumbent Republican Sen. Jim
Talent lost a close election to Democrat Claire McCaskill – Schlozman's four
indictments have produced one guilty plea."

In addition the Washington Post
reported<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/16/AR2005111602504.html>

 "Georgia voter ID program has been the subject of fierce partisan debate
since it was approved by the state's Republican-controlled legislature in
March. The plan was blocked on constitutional grounds in October by a U.S.
District Court judge, who compared the measure to a Jim Crow-era poll tax."

-- 
"Usually when people are sad, they don't do anything. They just cry over
their condition. But when they get angry, they bring about a change."
- Malcolm X, Malcolm X Speaks, 1965

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