EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
- Corporate Win: Supreme Court Says Monsanto Has 'Control Over Product of Life'
- How the US Turned Three Pacifists into Violent Terrorists
- Cornel West: Obama 'Is a War Criminal'
- Revealed: How US State Department 'Twists Arms' on Monsanto's Behalf
- Victory in Seattle as Teachers Win Battle in Standardized Test Boycott
Popular content
Today's Top News
Undermining the Right to Vote
There is no right more precious in our nation than the right of citizens to cast a ballot on Election Day. That is why generations of Americans have sacrificed and even died in efforts to expand the right to vote. Yet across the country, powerful corporate interests and the right-wing politicians who do their bidding are working hard to make it more difficult for citizens to vote. In more than two dozen states this year, bills have been introduced to restrict the right to vote; and in several states where Wall Street-backed Republicans control both houses of the legislature, governors have signed these fundamentally misguided measures into law.
As a result of these cynical attempts to turn back from the progress America has made in expanding voting rights, millions of voters are in for a surprise when they go to the polls. They will find new requirements that have never before existed, requirements that have been put in place to keep particular voters – students, minorities and senior citizens – from having their voices heard in our democracy.
In Ohio, for example, Gov. John Kasich and the Republican-controlled Legislature pushed through a measure that limits early voting and places new burdensome requirements on absentee ballots. “I think it is very calculated,” said State Sen. Nina Turner of Cleveland. The corporate-backed restrictions on voting are designed to reduce the ability of low-income and minority voters to cast a ballot, particularly by forcing boards of elections to close their doors on the weekend before Election Day. Voters whose jobs, family responsibilities or disabilities make it difficult for them to stand in long lines, often for many hours, will now find it harder to exercise their fundamental right to vote.
Ohio is not alone in enacting voter suppression laws. In Florida, Gov. Rick Scott pushed through a vast set of new and burdensome regulations that are designed to restrict the ability of working middle-class voters to cast a ballot. The period for early voting shrinks dramatically, and voters who have moved to a new county or have married and changed their names in the months prior to an election will not have their ballots counted on Election Day. Since the 1960s, Florida voters have been able to change their address or name at their precinct during early voting or on Election Day. But now they will only be given provisional ballots which may or may not be counted.
In Wisconsin this May, Gov. Scott Walker and his corporate-backed cronies in Madison enacted a law that will require every voter to show a government-issued identification card before they are able to cast a vote. Hundreds of thousands of Badger State voters will be denied their right to vote. A study conducted by the University of Wisconsin in Milwaukee determined that this change in Wisconsin’s law will have a serious impact, particularly on students and minorities. More than 50 percent of the African-American men and 49 percent of African-American women in the state do not have a driver’s license or passport. More than three out of every four young African-American males in the state lack such state-issued identification.
That shouldn’t surprise us. While most adult Americans have a driver’s license, it is not necessarily true for large groups of Americans. Students, other young people and the working poor living in metropolitan areas often rely on mass transit, rather than own a car. Senior citizens living in nursing homes or with their families often give up driving. The blind and others with physical disabilities don’t drive. All of them will be affected by these new restrictions.
Proponents claim that these changes are necessary to protect against voter fraud, but as a detailed study published by the Brennan Center for Justice notes: “By any measure, voter fraud is extraordinarily rare.” Former Pres. Bill Clinton got to the heart of the matter in early July when he summed up the efforts made to restrict the right to vote: “There has never been in my lifetime – since we got rid of the poll tax and all the Jim Crow burdens on voting – the determined effort to limit the franchise that we see today.”
What these laws are really about is consolidating the power-grab of the billionaires and Wall Street corporate barons. It is no coincidence that these restrictions on voting rights occur in many of the same states where the wealthy have attacked collective bargaining rights, privatized public services and cut programs that serve the working middle class to the bone. They have every reason to fear that the Main Street Movement created in the wake of their regressive policies would hold them accountable for their actions on Election Day.
That is why they are attacking the right of seniors, minorities and workers to cast an unfettered vote. That is why their actions are not only wrong, but a direct assault on our nation’s commitment to democracy. Voters have every right to be angry about these cynical efforts. We need to hold accountable the politicians who took these radical steps the next time we vote, before they eliminate our voice at the ballot box completely.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


8 Comments so far
Show AllI can think of many rights more important than the vote...given the utter lack of success of the United States citizen in dictating country policy, it could be virtually any...
I find the opening sentence to be pathetic...
I would go so far as to say it represents one of the greatest lies we must overcome, if we are to survive...
your vote means nothing...now what?
take back your neighborhood, and stop paying the banker on Global Start Date: September 22, 2012...
representative democracy is a failure...if it worked, things would be better, no?
Voting is so important that no one who has not prepared for it should vote. He should voluntarily stay home on election day. Every uninformed vote cancels the vote of someone who took the time to study the issues. Voters are responsible for the debt crisis and are also complicit in the millions of deaths we cause around the world.
In Vermont it is increasingly difficult for Independent and 3rd Party candidates. Even public buildings are restricted and only dem/repub candidates are permitted to participate in forums there. Censorship of political messages is common. This is because the dem/repub party is in total control. We need someone from Cuba to come and monitor our elections.
What good is a right to vote when there's no one to vote for that will represent your interests or your views? The people in the Soviet Union had a "right to vote" - for the all the good it did them. Corporations have more say than voters in this country. And the corporate-bought SCOTUS has ensured that it will stay that way. The founding fathers revolted against the British crown because they had no representation in Parliament. Under our current system most people in this country have no representation now. Nor ever will have given not only our two-party corporate-owned duopoly but our winner-take-all electoral sytem. Where's the f***ing revolution now?
While the handwriting has been on the shit house walls for sometime. It wasn't until I witnessed the SCOTUS appoint "the shrub" as president, that I realized how little my vote mattered.
Now the question seems:"What next"?
I have a better idea, have some pride & stop taking part in the fraud called elections:
Principled Nonvoting: The Beginning of Disengaging From the State
Labor day has come and gone, and there is an election this November. The campaign season is on. The airwaves, the internet, and what’s left of the print media are saturated with political ads. All of this leads many Americans to wonder who they’re going to vote for. Quite a few realize that the choice is essentially limited to the Democratic scoundrel or the Republican scoundrel. Regardless, to too many people voting is seen as a patriotic, almost sacred duty. Clichés abound about how our forefathers gave their lives so we can have the right to vote today. A lot of people see voting as a way to control the government and preserve our liberties. "If you don’t vote don’t complain", they say. In this article, however, I will explain why none of these positive things attributed to voting are true. In fact the very opposite is usually the case.
http://theinternationallibertarian.blogspot.com/2010/09/principled-nonvoting-beginning-of.html
Lee Saunders: "We need to hold accountable the politicians who took these radical steps the next time we vote, before they eliminate our voice at the ballot box completely."
Response: Lee, Your comments on the Republicans efforts are valid but do you also hold the Democrats accountable, or are you just using the issue as a rallying point for the Democrats? If you are addressing loyal Democratic voters, chances are they wouldn't vote for the Republicans whether or not the Republicans attempted to disenfranchise them. So there isn't much accountability there. Accountability pertains more to the Congressmen you elect, as the Republicans don't pretend to be accountable to Democratic voters.
The fact is, the Democrats and the Republicans have been disenfranchising voters for years, by setting excessive hurdles for independents to get on the ballots, suing independents (Greens) from getting on the ballots, working to make sure independents don't get into the presidential debates, using the Iowa/New Hampshire-first caucus/primary format to weed out candidates of their own parties so candidates drop out long before much of the nation even gets to vote for them, and marginalizing their own "fringe" candidates by trying to eliminate them from primary debates. I'll add, the Gore and the Democrats gifted to Bush the fraudulent 2000 election. So, Lee, Democrats are now whining because they are the victims, but has the AFL-CIO held the Democrats "accountable" as perpetrators? Welcome to Common Dreams!
"What these laws are really about is consolidating the power-grab of the billionaires and Wall Street corporate barons. It is no coincidence that these restrictions on voting rights occur in many of the same states where the wealthy have attacked collective bargaining rights, privatized public services and cut programs that serve the working middle class to the bone."
Exactly. The USA only has a 'democracy' for the rich.