Republican Operatives Step Up Attempts to Purge Voters

Oct 18, 2008
470
41
16
Bowling Green Ohio
Republican Operatives Step Up Attempts to Purge Voters

Posted By James Parks On October 27, 2008 @ 5:22 pm In Legislation & Politics | 5 Comments
Photo credit: moria


Seems like every day, we hear about more efforts by Republican operatives to suppress the vote. Kyla Berry, a college senior in [1] Georgia, received a letter three weeks ago telling her that she is not a U.S. citizen and is not eligible to vote.

That came as a surprise to Berry, who was born in Boston and has a U.S. passport and birth certificate to prove it. The letter, dated Oct. 2, gave her a week from the time it was dated to prove her citizenship. One big problem: The letter was postmarked Oct. 9.

Berry is one of more than 50,000 registered Georgia voters whose names have come up as a mismatch when checked against state computer records. At least 4,500 of those people are having their citizenship questioned, and the burden is on them to prove they are eligible to vote. Check out the video of CNN’s interview with Berry [2] here.

An African American college student, Berry represents the kind of voter Republican operatives often have sought to purge from the rolls before elections. Millions of new voters—many of them from groups that usually vote for Democrats—have registered, making it likely that next week’s vote will smash all previous records.

Republicans across the country are pulling out all the stops to keep the new voters and Democratic voters at home on Election Day. One of their biggest tools is the computer matching system in which registered voters’ names are cross-checked with state and federal databases. The databases are notorious for errors and typos, which means legitimate voters could be “flagged” and possibly purged from the rolls for no good reason.

A report by the nonpartisan [3] Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law found that states are [4] secretly purging roles with no supervision or national standards. As a result, efforts to clean up voter rolls are not as precise as they should be and eligible voters often are wrongly removed.



But that didn’t stop [5] Colorado Secretary of State Michael Coffman, a Republican. The voter advocacy group, Advancement Project, has filed suit against Coffman challenging illegal purges and cancellation practices that have removed between 16,000 and 30,000 voters from Colorado’s rolls.

The suit alleges, among other things, that Coffman has removed tens of thousands of voters from the official voter rolls after Aug. 4, 2008, in violation of federal law, which bans systematic removal of voters from the rolls within 90 days of a federal election.

Here are other examples of Republican determination to purge legal voters from the rolls:

* Even after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against them, [6] Ohio Republicans still are trying to use computer mismatches to challenge voter registrations. At the request of House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio), the White House asked the Department of Justice to look into whether 200,000 new Ohio voters must reconfirm their registration information before Nov. 4.
* In [7] Florida, election officials found that 75 percent of some 20,000 voter registration applications from a three-week period in September were mismatched due to typographical and administrative errors. Florida’s Republican secretary of state ordered the computer match system implemented in early September. Also in Florida, according to [8] Ari at Oxdown Gazette, some officials are planning to challenge the vote of anyone whose name is on a home foreclosure list—a move that has been successfully challenged in Michigan and Ohio.
* In [9] Wisconsin, Republican Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen sued the state’s election board after it voted against a proposal to implement a “no-match” policy. The board conducted an audit of its voter rolls and found a 22 percent match failure rate—including for four of the six members of the board. Van Hollen’s lawsuit was dismissed late last week.
* In [10] Montana earlier this month, U.S. District Court Judge Donald Molloy issued a scathing ruling denouncing the state Republican Party’s effort to challenge the registration of 6,000 voters. “The timing of the challenges is so transparent it defies common sense to believe the purpose is anything but political chicanery,” Molloy said. The Montana Republican Party and its leaders, he wrote, “are abusing the process.”

Article printed from AFL-CIO NOW BLOG: AFL-CIO NOW BLOG
 
Maybe she should have double checked her information when she submitted her voter registration...

This blog crap as proof has got to stop as well...

And remember one thing... verifying that people are indeed who they say they are, and ensuring that they are indeed eligible to vote, is not voter suppression....
 
The Republican Secretary of State in Georgia is disenfranchising as many voters as she can. She is the worst.

Republicans don't want people to vote because if everyone votes, the Republicans lose.
 
Gosh, I hate it when people try to get rid of the dead and cartoon character voters. And those poor, disenfranchised coffee shops!
 
And ensuring that registrations are filled out properly is part of ensuring that people who are registering to vote, are indeed eligible to vote

Wrong.

The Republicans are trying to make election boards compare voting lists to lists that have nothing to do with voting and if they are not a perfect match, then the new voters get kicked off the voting list.

That is not ensuring that registrations are filled out properly, that is voter suppression.
 
Wrong.

The Republicans are trying to make election boards compare voting lists to lists that have nothing to do with voting and if they are not a perfect match, then the new voters get kicked off the voting list.

That is not ensuring that registrations are filled out properly, that is voter suppression.

It is verification of information by using a source to bak up the information provided...

Much like if you fill out information differently on a credit application or within the various pages of mortgage paperwork , and see how far you get....

The government is comparing it against information already on record for verification attempts....

But nice try again, kirkybot
 
It is verification of information by using a source to bak up the information provided...

Much like if you fill out information differently on a credit application or within the various pages of mortgage paperwork , and see how far you get....

The government is comparing it against information already on record for verification attempts....

But nice try again, kirkybot

DumbDave, a driver's liscense is verification.

Comparing lists that have nothing to do with voting is not.
 
DumbDave, a driver's liscense is verification.

Comparing lists that have nothing to do with voting is not.

But if the information a person fills out a form with is not the same as on the driver's license, it is in question... if a person does not have a drivers license, it is indeed right to check the information against another source

I have a neighbor who recently got married.. and when registering to vote for our district she was asked to double check her information and provide proof, because the name she tried to register under was not the same as what was on her license, because she had not received her new license or new soc sec card... and all she had to do was bring in her marriage license and a bill from the house... but it was proper to flag that and check it

It is also to check if there are already other family names registered under an address.. for that brings suspicion... there are indeed reasons to check and verify... and it is NOT voter suppression, kirkybot
 

New Topics

Forum List

Back
Top