Hi.  Reading this article is a must.  The hearing itself tapped into the 
now-rooted, national emotional unhappiness with what has to be the discovery of 
a lifetime:  Our elections are dishonest and our votes stolen.  It won't go 
away, will be built upon and  form the anchor of a new, broad democratic 
movement.  
Ed

PS It was carried live on kpfk from 8-9am and more of it on other Pacifica 
stations.  It was a last minute production and should have been decided earlier 
and widely announced.

 http://www.truthout.org/docs_04/printer_120904W.shtml 
  Author's Note | To read my blog report from the hearing today, please go 
here. Statements made and then placed on the record during the hearing can be 
found here. - wrp
    From Selma to Ohio: A Report from the Conyers Hearing 
    By William Rivers Pitt 
    t r u t h o u t | Report 

    Wednesday 08 December 2004 

    It looked for all the world like a real hearing. Along the far wall were 
arrayed Congressional Representatives from the Judiciary Committee. Before them 
at a long table sat witnesses and experts in front of microphones, prepared to 
give testimony on the record. Behind the witnesses sat row upon row of everyday 
citizens who came out to watch the proceedings; the crowd was so large that an 
overflow room needed to be opened on another floor. Along both walls were 
arrayed more than a dozen television cameras. 

    It looked like a real hearing but it wasn't, because despite the issuing of 
invitations by the Democratic Minority members to their GOP Majority brethren 
on the Judiciary Committee, not one Republican congressman bothered to show up 
or give their blessing to the proceedings. Judiciary staffers from the Minority 
office told me the GOP majority would not even allow this hearing to be 
videotaped on the television equipment that came with the hearing room, and so 
they were forced to pester C-SPAN into showing up. They did, along with a 
number of other media outlets, but the effect was a quieting of the entire 
event. 

    In the official sense, then, this was not a true Congressional hearing. It 
bore no weight in law. One cannot overstate, however, the importance of what 
took place in room 2237 of the Rayburn House Office Building today. In this 
place was discussed the very future of participatory democracy in America, and 
the serious problems that future holds if the allegations of vote fraud in Ohio 
and elsewhere which were the subject of this hearing, are not dealt with in 
immediate and dynamic fashion. 

    It all began with a letter from Rep. John Conyers to Ohio Secretary of 
State Blackwell. In that letter, Conyers described a long series of 
irregularities in the Ohio Presidential election that amounted to an accusation 
of fraud. The letter was the basis for today's hearing, and made sure to invite 
Blackwell to participate. It is worth noting that Blackwell did not show up 
today. 

    The hearing itself was a showcase for both fact and passion. The witnesses, 
the Representatives before them, and the crowd that filled the room lit the 
place up with a concerned electricity. Some believed the irregularities and 
outright fraud which marred the Ohio vote require immediate redress, a 
successful completion of which could come to overthrow the results of last 
month's election. Others saw the hearings as a gift to their children and the 
future, a means to ensure that any and all elections to come will not suffer 
the kind of nonsense that afflicted both November of 2004 and November of 2000. 

    Jon Bonifaz, general counsel for the National Voting Institute, is bringing 
a lawsuit against Secretary of State Blackwell in order to bring about a full 
recount of the vote in Ohio. He said of the hearings today, "I think this moves 
the ball forward with respect to demonstrating that people in this country, 
throughout this nation, demand a full accounting of what happened on election 
day, and demand that all votes be properly counted. Until we get to that point 
of all votes being properly counted, we cannot declare this to be a legitimate 
election." 

    Some scattered observations from my notes of the proceedings: 

    Rep. Nadler: The right to vote and to have the votes counted is 
indispensable. Confidence in our election processes is on the wane, and the 
stability of our government is threatened. We do not have the luxury of waiting 
to fix all this, as the next national election comes in two years. 

    Rep. Scott: The complaints were not limited to Ohio. In his state of 
Virginia, some 500 complaints were made by voters. In his own district, voters 
were given ballots that did not have his name on them. 

    Rep. Watt: The basic premise of our democracy is the vote. If it is broken, 
it must be fixed, and we must institutionalize a process that continually 
evaluates the way we run elections. If we can deliver ballots to rural voters 
in Afghanistan on the backs of donkeys, surely we can make sure our elections 
are free and fair here in America. 

    Ralph Neas (President, People for the American Way): In Cuyahoga county, 
Ohio, there were fewer voting machines available to the voters during the 
Presidential election than there were during the primary election. Secretary of 
State Blackwell, he of the paper-weight obstructionism, wins the Katherine 
Harris award this time around. There should be prosecutions over all this, and 
people should go to jail. 

    Cliff Arnebeck (Chair, Common Cause Ohio): The fraud must be fixed. It must 
be fixed now, and not in the future. People cannot and will not accept a 
fraudulent election for the office of President. The best precedent that can be 
set is to state flatly that people will not tolerate fraud, and will not 'move 
on' until the problems are repaired. How can we, with a straight face, talk 
about democracy in Iraq when we cannot guarantee democracy here at home? 

    Shawnta Walcott (Zogby Inc.): This election has created an unprecedented 
level of suspicion that things did not go as they should have. Zogby Inc. wants 
to see a blue-ribbon panel created immediately to investigate the claims made 
at this hearing. 

    Rep. Jackson: We must have a standardized national voting process and take 
the matter out of the hands of individual states, which can keep the process 
"separate and unequal." We must have a constitutional amendment guaranteeing 
the right to vote. How can people argue that the right to own a gun is 
implicitly stated in the constitution, and then turn around and say it is 
acceptable to have the right to vote only be 'implicit' in the constitution? 

    It was this last point, made over and over again by Reverend Jesse Jackson, 
that drew the most applause from the audience and attention from the 
Congressmen. In demanding a constitutional amendment cementing the simple right 
to vote, Jackson spoke of the long line that reached from Selma, Alabama to 
Ohio, and into this room. "This is not about who won or lost," he said. "This 
is about participating in democracy. The 2004 election is not past-tense. We 
are not whining. It is time to take this struggle to the streets and fully 
legitimize this struggle." 

    The importance of the presence of Reverend Jackson was described best by 
Cliff Arnebeck. "If you look at who was here," said Arnebeck, "you had leaders 
from the generally white political reform movement, and leaders from the black 
civil rights movement. This is a powerful coalition. We are not talking about 
one group having dominance over the other, but a real partnership of the 
traditional political reform community with the traditional civil rights 
community, and Reverend Jackson is the one that proposed it, has initiated the 
organization of it." 

    "Jesse Jackson, as you could see today, is giving tremendous moral 
leadership to this," continued Arnebeck. "He has tremendous credibility. This 
is a man who walked with Dr. Martin Luther King in the long civil rights 
struggle that we honor so much in our history now. This is the man who was 
holding Dr. King when he died. I was sitting right next to him when he talked 
about the fact that there aren't members of Congress with children dying in 
Iraq, and tears were in his eyes. This is a man who feels this stuff deeply, 
and when he talks about what is at stake, he means it in the deepest part of 
his being. It shows, and people respect that, and I feel privileged to be 
associated with him in this struggle." 

    The hearing today took place in a unique moment in our history. Election 
fraud and voter disenfranchisement are not new in our history, but have been as 
much a part of the process as campaign buttons and baby-kissing. The fact that 
the electorate's voting habits are becoming more clearly drawn, and the fact 
that so many were watching like hawks after Florida in 2000, means that the 
standard-issue fraud which has always existed now has a bright light shining 
upon it, and means the new kinds of fraud involving electronic machines and 
computer tabulators are likewise suffering intense scrutiny. In this moment, 
that bright light means the problems, both new and old, can and must be 
addressed, repaired, and purged from our democratic process. 

    Aspects of the hearing could have been better. There was a lot of heat from 
the panelists and from the crowd, but not nearly as much cold data delivered. 
Had the forum presented that cold data, had the forum made an irrefutable case, 
the process to come would have been better served. The data was there - the 
panelists came armed with reams of paper and facts - but needs to be more fully 
delivered to the public at large. There were also grumblings among the 
assembled about why it was that Dennis Kucinich was not in attendance, about 
why Howard Dean chose this day to hold a press conference that sucked some of 
the media oxygen out of the hearing room, and about why no Kerry campaign 
people or Senate staffers made any kind of public appearance at the event. 

    There was also a moment of deep frustration when the Representatives opened 
the floor to general questions from the audience. This led to something that 
always seems to happen when liberals and progressives get in a room together. 
Person after person came to the microphone not to ask questions, but to 
pontificate at length on whatever crossed their minds. As usual, this stole 
time from people who actually had questions, and led to a watering-down of the 
information at hand. When Conyers gently prodded people to move it along, some 
got openly aggressive and angry, despite the fact that they were riding 
roughshod over the stated process. Rep. Frank finally had to lay down the stomp 
on the quickly-unwinding process. The open forum could have been a beneficial 
addition to the hearing, but became in the end a waste of valuable time. 

    At the end of the day, the hearing was a beginning, a chance for those 
fighting this fight to look upon one another and know they are not alone. Rep. 
Conyers and his fellow Congressmen are to be commended for putting the process 
in motion. The most striking moment came when the hearing ended, and all of the 
people assembled began embracing one another. They had made their voices heard, 
they knew they were not alone, and it smelled like vindication in there when 
all was said and done. 

    The hearing was a beginning. There will be more, especially in Ohio. The 
lawsuits will continue. Rep. Conyers intimated today that he might object to 
the seating of the Ohio Electors when the certification process begins. The 
protests will continue to grow across the country. Perhaps, if we can follow 
through and accomplish the cleansing of our democratic process, we will look 
back on this day in room 2237 of the Rayburn House Office Building and know 
that yet another popular movement towards achieving that more perfect union 
began here, in this time, and in this place. 



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    William Rivers Pitt is a New York Times and international bestseller of two 
books - 'War on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You To Know' and 'The 
Greatest Sedition is Silence.' 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]






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