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FReepers Against Voter Fraud
November20, 2002 | sweetliberty

Posted on 11/20/2002 2:30:31 PM PST by sweetliberty

"The right of citizens to vote and have their vote count is the cornerstone of our democracy - the necessary precondition of government of the people, by the people and for the people. Enforcing the laws that guarantee voting rights and punish voting fraud is the duty of the Department of Justice. More than mere law enforcement, our responsibility to protect the access to and integrity of elections is the responsibility of upholding freedom itself.

America is a nation whose founding documents and most inspired words uphold the ideal of democratic self-government as a model for the world. The opening phrases of the Declaration of Independence declare that governmental power, if it is to be just, must be derived from the consent of the governed. The Constitution begins, purposefully and deliberately, with these three words: "We the people . . ."

America has failed too often to uphold the right of every citizen's vote, once cast, to be counted fairly and equally. Votes have been bought, voters intimidated and ballot boxes stuffed. The polling process has been disrupted or not completed. Voters have been duped into signing absentee ballots believing they were applications for public relief. And the residents of cemeteries have infamously shown up at the polls on election day.

Today, it is more important than ever before that we embrace the privilege that makes us unique among the peoples, nations and societies of human history. Our way of life is not a given, and our freedom is not an accident. Liberty is a rare gift for which millions have worked and suffered and sacrificed and died. It now falls to us to guard this gift from those who would destroy it. It falls to us, the free, to ensure that the cornerstone of our freedom - government of the people, by the people, and for the people - does not perish from the earth."

(Excerpted from remarks of Attorney General John Ashcroft at the Voting Integrity Symposim - October 8, 2002)

It has been quite a month and overall a victorious one for Republicans. The new year looms bright on the horizon with the promise of much needed changes taking place now that we have the majority in both the House and Senate and with the opportunity to finally have some conservative judges seated who will uphold the Constitution rather than legislating the socialist agenda of the Democrats from the bench and Tiny Tommy Daschle and his obstructionist thugs have been spanked soundly and sent to their room in a manner of speaking.

While we had several days of delirious gloating, drunk on the thrill of a hard earned and well-deserved victory, we know all too well that the election and the events leading up to it were not without incident and once again the deck was stacked against us as the Democrats tried every trick in the book in a shameless effort at stealing yet another election. With the blatant disregard for the law so characteristic of them when it obstructs their designs, they managed to get a liberal kangaroo court to uphold the replacement of Torricelli on the ballot in New Jersey beyond the legal deadline for doing so for no other reason than having determined that the scandal and corruption surrounding Torricelli rendered him incapable of winning. In Minnesota, prior to Paul Wellstone's ill-fated final flight, a plan was uncovered that had Democrats busing in students from out of state to take advantage of Minnesota's same day voter registration and vote illegally for Paul Wellstone. Even as this was being revealed, the campaign was underway to push a similar same day registration legislation in Colorado and California, thereby opening new opportunities for illegal voting in those states. In South Dakota Democrat operatives (sorry, I cannot bring myself to use the word "Democratic") paid a field worker in excess of $12,000 over a period of 3 months to register native Americans on the reservations. It was later discovered that many registration cards that had been turned in by that worker had been written in the same handwriting. Among the newly registered was at least one who was recently deceased. This and other irreglarities that were uncovered in South Dakota has led to 1 out of 10 ballots there being under investigation. Fish need water, plants need sunshine, an addict needs a fix and Democrats need power and these three cases are just samples of the extent to which they will go to get it.

The idea for this thread was born following the Arkansas Hog Wild FReepers' discovery of organized intimidation tactics on the part of Democrat and NAACP operatives in Jefferson County, Arkansas as relayed by FReeper, stop_the_rats, a Republican poll watcher who gained undesired and unfair national notoriety during early voting, and by a Republican campaign worker who "infiltrated" the Clinton led, pre-election campaign "event" there. The original story was posted as part of the after-FReep report with more detail added in a post-election update. The story generated such outrage that the thread turned into a FReeper brainstorm as we labored over how we might counteract the dishonest methods employed by the Democrats to hijack elections. The effort yielded an abundance of references and it was generally agreed that voter fraud is, or at least should be, of great concern to all of us. There is a strong probability that the South Dakota election was stolen and in Arkansas the fraud machine was spinning out of control and may well have cost Tim Hutchinson his senate seat as well, despite the shadow cast over him in the wake of his divorce and remarriage. Chances are that we'll never know. Thankfully neither of these races ended up being the tie-breaker that would determine the balance of power in the Senate, but either could have been and had that been the case, you can bet it would have gotten really ugly and may have produced an entirely different outcome.

Even as the Democrats are still licking their wounds and wondering what on Earth happened on November 5, they are already scrambling and scheming and conniving as to ways to prevent our intercepting their next power grab in 2004. This is revealed in their ongoing efforts to block any attempt to validate a voter's legitimacy whether it be by requiring a legal form of ID at the polls, the repeal of motor voter legislation, cracking down on absentee balloting and early voting, doing away with same day registration or by the presence of poll watchers at polling places. In every case they play the race card crying "black voter intimidation" when in reality they are simply thrashing against the net that could trap those guilty of voting illegally thereby inhibiting travel on their familiar roads of voter fraud. Thankfully, Republicans were more diligent this year and undoubtedly made an impact. More questionable ballots were challenged, more questions raised, more accountability called for and more light shed on irregularities. Until recently, prosecution for voter fraud has been virtually unheard of, but that is starting to change. There have been hundreds of stories published over the past several weeks relating to voting irregularities and credible allegations of fraud. Some have led to criminal charges being filed and still others have led to investigations which are ongoing. While it is unlikely that all election fraud can be stopped, it is much harder for it operate under a spotlight, which is exactly why we must each do our part to make sure that the spotlight stays on those "shadowy" recesses where voting machines mysteriously vanish, ballot boxes are obscured from view and the demons of electoral darkness run amok.

It was suggested that the opening remarks of Attorney General John Ashcroft be used as the basis of our mission statement for this thread. In these precarious times when we are at war and we are threatened daily by terrorism, our liberty has become more precious than ever and we must be vigilant to protect it not only from foreign invaders, but also from those who would erode it from within by compromising the integrity of our elections. In order to succeed in a battle it is essential to know the enemy and attack at the point of greatest vulnerability. Included here is a list of links, which while by no means exhaustive, can serve to enlighten. Many of these stories are from Arkansas only because this was the springboard for this thread and we look forward to other FReepers adding stories from their own areas as well as any based in personal experience. The original thread also produced a wealth of resources as we discussed who we should contact if we became aware of voting irregularities or suspected fraud. Again the list of links is far from comprehensive and additions are welcome. Of course the whole point of this exercise is to get more conservative voters involved in changing the laws to close loopholes which make it easy to cheat, to promote the enforcement of existing election laws and to take part in the election process at the local level all with the goal of intercepting future fraud campaigns. In other words our goal is to STOP THE RATS FROM HIJACKING THE ELECTION PROCESS AND TAKE OUR COUNTRY BACK!

Many thanks to all the wonderful FReepers who contributed their time, energy and ideas to produce the foundation for this thread:

kcvl; kayak; zeaal; demosthenes the elder; terriergal; Brad's Gramma; Budge; TheLion; backhoe; ForGod'sSake; Congressman Billybob; nicmarlo; Ragtime Cowgirl; to ST.LOUIE1 for his graphics and of course to Jim Robinson who has given us this great forum and sense of purpose. A very special thanks and salute goes out to stop_the_rats for her patriotism and tenacity in facing down the enemy within. She is a warrior of whom we should be proud. What a great screen name AND battle cry for the mission of this thread!

Awareness- know thy enemy! If any of these links become outdated many of these articles are posted on the original FReep thread. If you let me know via FReepmail, I will make editorial adjustments accordingly before renewing the thread.

It's Voter Fraud Season Again!

The Nagging Problem of Election Fraud

Voter Fraud: Can It Be Stopped?

The Greatest Cover-up Of All: Vote Fraud In America

The Motor Voter Act and Voter Fraud

Absentee Ballot Fraud among Democrats in Florida an Old Story

An election scam

Should We Take Voter Fraud as Seriously as Business Fraud?

Voter Reform: Why Are Democrats Opposed To A Photo ID to Vote?

More allegations of vote fraud surface

Two convicted of voter fraud get probation

Voter Fraud In Arkansas (2000)

FRAUD in Arkansas!!! Voters Illegally Casting Ballots 2 Weeks Early in Organized Effort by Dems (2000)

Arkansan pleads guilty in vote fraud

Investigators Look Into Another Vote Fraud Case

1,000 Republican Students Denied Right to Vote

Arkansas GOP charges vote fraud

Missing Voting Mechanism Recovered

The Democrats Lost Ugly

Looking Back On Tuesday's Election Problems

The Oglala Sioux's Senator

Let’s Hear It for Fraud – And REAL Soon

Ghost Precincts

The Vote Fraud Archives

Need Vote Fraud articles, stories, and evidence? Here's a source...

Access One reason the Democrats get away with as much as they do is because they make a lot of noise. It is time WE make some noise of our own. There are a number of individuals, organizations and media sources who support our Constitution and seek to protect the integrity of our elections. Here are a few of them. Rather than clutter the body of this thread with a long list of email addresses, I will post the websites. Most of these have contacts and email addresses on them.

Department of Justice Voting Rights Home Page

FBI

American Conservative Union

Eagle Forum

Eagle Forum of Arkansas

The Heritage Foundation

ACLJ

Fox News

Drudge Report

Rush Limbaugh

Hugh Hewitt

Election Law Below is a very brief list of some election laws and guidelines which we have referenced recently. I am sure this section will grow considerably as others add their contributions.

Arkansas Election Code

Arkansas Election Faqs

State Requirements For Voter ID

Texas Pollwatcher's Guide

Vote Fraud and Election Issues (Lots of Links)

Limitations On Lawyers

Reporting Unlicensed Lawyers

Action What can FReepers do? For starters we can identify states that will have key races in the 2004 election. Is your state one of them? Let's start getting important information about the race, the candidates, the electoral history of the state, the laws in that state and how open they may leave the process to tampering, history of voter fraud in the state, conservative media outlets there, and whatever else you can think of that might be relevant to equip the electorate to head off problems in advance.

Democrats LIE! Their biggest and most effective lie is that Republicans are deliberately trying to prevent blacks and/or other minorities from voting. In effect, they're calling us racists. The truth is that it is them who seem to consider blacks and other minorities so inferior and ignorant and lackiing in initiative that they are incapable of voting without the benefit of THEIR "guidance" and "protection". Their greatest fear is that blacks will recognize how badly they've been duped and insulted by these people and leave the party in droves. We need to work with that. Black conservatives have perhaps the greatest responsibility for telling other black voters the truth about the Democrat party, although it is certainly something we should all work on.

Talk about election fraud. Bring it up whenever an opportunity presents itself. Keep a notebook at all times and if someone tells you anything pointing to vote fraud, get more details. Write down such things as county, precinct, candidates in the race, name of the witness and whatever else you can think of. If it seems credible, report it to someone.

Take part in the process. Here is a list of suggestions that stop_the_rats posted on another thread:

1. Plan to take election day off in 2004.
2. Be a poll worker. You get paid for this.
3. Be a poll watcher. Call your local Republican headquarters or the campaign office of one of your Republican candidates and volunteer to be a poll watcher.
4. Count absentee ballots. You get paid for this also.
5. Be a poll closer. It's a long day. Some people who can't poll watch because of work, could agree to come after work for 2 hours and close the polls to give poll watchers a break. Get final counts and make sure no "late" voters turn up.
6. Take lunches to poll workers and poll watchers.
7. Man the headquarters so if problems arise, poll workers or watchers have a place to call for help. Have a list of numbers: local election officals, state officals.
8. Find a person who will agree to "be in charge" of all the rules poll watchers and poll workers need to follow. Each state has rules and in some cases, state election representatives will come to your city and give a presentation.
9. Encourage others to get involved.
10. Smile; we have them worried!

Some might want to take it a step furthur, if that is an option in your area, and be an election judge. Or you may have specific talents and training that you could donate to the cause, such as legal assistance and advice.

Finally; ask questions. FReepers have an uncanny ability to ask the right questions in most any situation AND to find answers and we have an inexhaustable resource right here on Free Republic. Here are just a few questions to start with.

"If fraud is suspected, how do we find out who is behind it?"

"How do we work to get cooperation between poll watchers and workers and clarify expectations on all sides BEFORE an election?"

"How can you prove fraud? What is legal in a given state (photos, tape recording, witness statements, compiling a list of names, video taping)?"

And last, but certainly not least, pray!

"If My people who are called by My name humble themselves and pray and seek My face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, will forgive their sin and will heal their land." (2 Chronicles 7:14)

"Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord" (Psalm 33:12a)

FReepers; your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to get out there and STOP THE RATS!


TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Foreign Affairs; Free Republic; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Arkansas; US: Connecticut; US: Florida; US: Georgia; US: Kansas; US: Kentucky; US: Maine; US: Minnesota; US: New Hampshire; US: New York; US: North Carolina; US: Oregon; US: South Dakota; US: Texas; US: Vermont; US: Virginia; US: Wisconsin
KEYWORDS: campaigns; cheatingdemocrats; corruption; elections; votefraud; voterfraud
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To: TheLion
That looks like a real good resource (post#289).
301 posted on 11/23/2002 7:09:05 PM PST by sweetliberty
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To: nicmarlo; Registered; sweetliberty; ST.LOUIE1; Budge; stop_the_rats
...it's imperative to VISUALLY see the rampantness of voter fraud....IT'S HUGE!

As I think you indicated earlier, the size areawise is actually very small; it's impact is HUGE. And I agree, an eye catching graphic is almost always a big plus. One of the reasons there was a bit of a dust up when the county voting map was first introduced in '00; it vividly shows the lines of demarcation. Essentially the heartland--flyover country, set against the population centers--cesspools.

You've got some neat ideas for a graphic and I would add something like the Coroner's After Action Report, or Coroner's Report, particularly concerning the recent increase in absentee ballots....it's gotta be tough voting in person when one is, well, six feet under ; )

I'll play around with it some to see what I can come up with. If Registered could be enticed to join the cause, we could be assured of some drop dead graphics. Registered, if you're interested, please see post #210 and following for some ideas...

FGS

302 posted on 11/23/2002 8:20:22 PM PST by ForGod'sSake
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To: ForGod'sSake
Just ran across this.


303 posted on 11/23/2002 8:33:00 PM PST by sweetliberty
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To: sweetliberty
Just ran across this.

OUCH; that smarts! It does tell a tale though...

FGS

304 posted on 11/23/2002 8:42:11 PM PST by ForGod'sSake
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To: nicmarlo
Bush can be mad at Jeffords for giving his word on something and then doing a backstabbing maneuver, but I don't understand why Bush is supposedly mad at Tancredo. People who hold different views don't make him mad. What did Tancredo DO?
305 posted on 11/23/2002 8:54:40 PM PST by patriciaruth
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To: sweetliberty; Mudboy Slim
"I think in a way y'all are at an advantage with off year elections. Does that effect all races in Virginia other than the presidential election, or just certain ones"? Since I am a novice in Virginia politics, I will defer to Mud to shed some light on that question.
306 posted on 11/23/2002 8:56:51 PM PST by TheLion
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To: sweetliberty
It's just the news that is circulating around this small town. Nothing like this would ever make the news/press (unless there were some sort of investigation). Around here - news travels fast, and no-one has secrets for long.
307 posted on 11/23/2002 8:58:48 PM PST by TheBattman
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To: TheBattman; Mo1

308 posted on 11/23/2002 9:09:27 PM PST by sweetliberty
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To: sweetliberty
OMG ... fofl
309 posted on 11/23/2002 9:26:27 PM PST by Mo1
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To: TheBattman
Oops! I accicentally posted that cartoon on the wrong thread. LOL! Must be getting late.
310 posted on 11/23/2002 9:27:12 PM PST by sweetliberty
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To: Mo1
LOL! I meant to post that on the other thread. Well, actually I have now.
311 posted on 11/23/2002 9:29:13 PM PST by sweetliberty
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To: sweetliberty
I have been searching for results in early voting and absentee voting to try and determine if there are any irregularities. These statistics are hard to find. I came across this wonderful piece on the hazards and problems of early voting. While written for Georgia...its implications are scary and they are nationwide.

Should Georgia Adopt Early Voting?

Hans A. von Spakovsky1

In Georgia, as in other states, we are concerned over the continuing decline in voter turnout. On a national level, the 49% turnout in the presidential election of 1996 was the lowest turnout in a presidential election since Calvin Coolidge was elected in 1924 and the second lowest since 1824. The national turnout of 36%2 of the eligible electorate in the 1998 mid-term election was the lowest turnout in congressional elections since 1942, when America was deeply involved in World War II and millions of American servicemen were overseas. The turnout in Georgia was even lower: in 1996 it was 42.6% and in 1998 it was 31.6%.

Early voting, the ability to vote a ballot during a period prior to the normal election day (usually up to 21 days), has been proposed as a way of increasing turnout in Georgia3 and has actually been implemented in some states. The theory put forward is that it is simply too difficult for voters to make it to the polls during the 12 hours that polls are open in Georgia (7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.) and other states. Providing an extended period of time for individuals to vote will, therefore, supposedly increase turnout. If this theory sounds familiar, it is because the same assertion was used to promote the passage of the National Voter Registration Act of 1993, or Motor Voter. At that time, the long-term decline in turnout that we have been experiencing in the United States was said to be due to the alleged "complexity" of registering to vote. Motor Voter was needed to make it "easier" to register to vote — turnout would increase if Motor Voter was passed. The number of individuals registering to vote has increased since Motor Voter went into effect; however, turnouts have continued to decline, making it clear that any problems associated with registering to vote were not the culprit for declining turnout. The real reasons for declining turnout are based on a variety of substantive causes, including public cynicism and satisfaction with the status quo, not the procedural rules for registering and voting.

In the same way that Motor Voter was not a solution to low turnout, early voting is also not a panacea for declining turnout and decreasing participation in the political process by the average citizen. Twelve states have put some form of early voting into effect.4 But according to a recent study on voter turnout by the highly respected nonpartisan Committee for the Study of the American Electorate ("CSAE"), early voting has not stemmed the decrease in turnout. In an exhaustive study of turnout in all fifty states, CSAE concluded that those states that have adopted early voting or no-fault absentee voting "performed worse in terms of either greater average turnout declines" in years when turnout went down such as 1996 and 1998 and experienced "lesser average turnout increases" in election years when turnout increased such as 1992 and 1994, than states that did not adopt either of these voting procedures. What is worse, prior to adopting early voting and no-fault absentee voting, the states that adopted such procedures "had been performing better than those states that never adopted these procedures."5

For example, the average turnout of the voting age population in the 1998 election in states with early voting was more than 3 percentage points lower than in all other states (33% versus 36.6%). The average turnout in early voting states in the 1994 election was 0.7 percentage points less than in all other states (38.1% versus 38.8%). Turnout in early voting and no-fault absentee voting states declined 3% in 1998 but only decreased 2.5% in all other states. Turnout went up 1.4% in 1994 in early voting and no-fault absentee states versus an increase of 2.6% in all other states.6

Why, contrary to expectations, would turnout worsen in states that have adopted early voting? CSAE concluded that early voters are probably individuals "who are sufficiently motivated that they would likely vote anyway and because it is so easy, they tend to forget to do their duty." By allowing a longer period to vote, you "are diffusing mobilization and get-out-the vote activities over a long time and reducing their one-day intensity." Finally, one is encouraging "values that reduce the call of citizen responsibility in the name of making voting easier," and therefore reducing the impulse to vote.7

Aside from its failure to increase turnout, there are other problems with early voting. Early voting statutes typically give local election officials the choice of where to open early voting precincts. For instance, Georgia Senate Bill 235 as originally introduced provided that in addition to the main office of a county or city, the location of other polling places would be decided by "the board of registrars or early ballot clerk."8 This creates the possibility that a local municipality could attempt to manipulate the outcome of an election by opening up early voting locations in those precincts that may vote in a particular way based on past election results, thus, altering the composition of the participating electorate. If Precinct A has voted strongly for Republican Party candidates in prior elections while Precinct B has voted strongly for Democratic Party candidates, local election officials may be able to raise the vote totals for one of the parties by only opening an early voting location in one of these precincts and not the other. As another example, if election officials want to increase the likelihood that a school bond referendum will pass, they could open up early voting locations only in schools with the probability that parents taking their children to school would be more likely to vote in favor of such a referendum.

In 1997, there were allegations that such a result occurred in Bastrop, Texas. The Bastrop Independent School District had a school bond issue soundly defeated two to one in 1996 when only two early voting sites were open. In 1997, the School District rescheduled a vote on the bond issue but this time opened multiple early voting sites only at local schools with extended evening hours during school events.9 The bond issue passed by a very narrow margin, with about one third of the votes cast early. Of those early votes, two-thirds were in favor of the bonds. However, if the votes cast on election day had been the only votes counted, the bond issue would have failed.10 Whether or not the School District intended to affect the vote, the differing results of the early votes and those votes cast on election day make it clear that early voting can affect the outcome of an election. That raises serious questions about the selection of early voting locations by municipalities.

In addition, early voting will significantly raise the cost of political campaigns. Most political candidates and campaigns spend the bulk of their money in the last few days before election day on direct mail, advertising, phone banking, and get-out-the-vote efforts. With early voting, such expenses will stretch over a much longer period, resulting in more expensive campaigns. Any candidate who does not spend money on such efforts during the early voting period will be at an inherent disadvantage. Early voting will, therefore, increase the cost barrier to the ability of the average citizen to participate in the political process as a candidate.

This has been the experience of candidates in states that have instituted early voting, mail-in balloting, and liberal absentee voting. Brian Baird, a Democratic candidate in Washington State’s Third Congressional District, spent nearly one million dollars more in his 1998 race than in his earlier unsuccessful race in 1996.11 Almost all of those additional funds were used to target early mail voters, something he had not done in his prior run. In 1998, Baird won.12 Unless candidates reach early voters, they cannot hope to win elections.

Early voting can be very expensive for local government as well as candidates and may delay election results. Counties and municipalities hire hundreds of temporary workers on election day to staff polling locations. Hiring temporary workers for up to three weeks at additional polling sites can be very expensive. Harris County, Texas, spends an additional $250,000 during each election to open just 26 additional polling locations for early voting.13 Travis County, Texas, which had 357,737 registered voters in 1992, incurred $93,609 in early voting costs in that election.14

As proposed in Georgia, registered voters would go to an early voting polling location and vote a ballot. However, the ballot would then be sealed in two envelopes and held until election day. The outer envelope could be opened beginning at noon on election day and the inner envelope could be opened when the polls close at 7:00 to begin preparing the ballots for tabulating.15 Thus, early ballots would be treated the same as absentee ballots. Absentee ballots are the last ballots counted in most counties on election day because of the time it takes to open up the two sealed envelopes that such ballots are in and to prepare the ballots for counting after the polls close.

In Fulton County, Georgia, in the 1996 election, it took a team of 57 staff members almost six hours to prepare 12,833 absentee ballots for counting. Early voting jurisdictions have experienced early voting turnout of 20% to 50% of the total votes cast.16 Based on the 1996 turnout in Fulton County,17 this would have resulted in upwards of 50,000 to 125,000 ballots that would have had to be opened. Such a large number of ballots would greatly expand the time required to count the votes, even if the election staff is greatly increased (with corresponding increased costs) and could significantly delay final vote tallies and election results.

Early voting in Georgia will make it more difficult for election officials to discard the ballots of voters who vote early but die before the ballots are tabulated. In Georgia, the process for notification to the Secretary of State by the local registrars of vital statistics of the names of deceased individuals is only required once a month.18 Such reports must be filed by the tenth day of the month and contain the names of individuals who die during the preceding month. The Secretary of State is then obligated to forward that information to the appropriate county so that county election officials can delete such individuals from the registered voter list.19 Therefore, even if the Secretary of State acts immediately, the earliest that county election officials would be notified that an individual is deceased would be at least a week after a general election. At that time, it will be too late to void such ballots. This is currently a problem with absentee ballots, but would be a much larger problem with early voting.

Early voting can hurt the integrity of the election process by limiting independent oversight of election procedures. The ability of candidates and political parties to appoint poll watchers as observers at polling locations maintains the security of our election process and helps prevent the commission of vote fraud by both voters and election officials. It is already difficult for most candidates and parties to find enough volunteers to cover polling locations in the larger counties on election day. Trying to organize such a poll-watching program at additional polling locations for up to three weeks will probably be impossible, making it very difficult for outside observers to monitor the election.

Finally, there is a possibility that in elections where a candidate for federal office is on the ballot, early voting may violate the U.S. Constitution. Although a number of states have had early voting statutes in place for some time, there is currently a lawsuit pending in Texas to have that state’s early voting statute declared unconstitutional.20 Under the authority of the Constitution, federal law specifies a single federal election day (the Tuesday after the first Monday in November) as the exclusive day throughout the U.S. for balloting for U.S. Representatives, U.S. Senators, and Presidential Electors.21 By allowing up to three weeks for balloting, early voting statutes may unconstitutionally lengthen the one-day nationwide election prescribed by federal law for candidates for federal offices. Louisiana’s October open primary balloting system, which can result in a candidate winning prior to the November election, has already been found unconstitutional as a violation of federal election-day statutes by the U.S. Supreme Court.22 Similarly, extending voting over a three-week period rather than holding it on one day as mandated by federal law could be found to be a violation of federal law and the exclusive authority of Congress under the Constitution to promulgate rules for election to federal office. Therefore, even if Georgia were to adopt early voting, it could be declared invalid in the future at least for federal offices. A two-part election, i.e., one for state offices with early voting and another for federal offices with a single election day, would create numerous practical and legal problems and would be very confusing.

All of these considerations show that early voting is not a solution to the continuing problem of declining turnout in our elections. In fact, based on the experience of other states, it may hasten the decline. It also promotes many negative trends. The higher costs of campaigning caused by early voting may discourage participation in the political process and increase the costs of elections to local governments. The ability of election officials to manipulate results and the increased difficulty for political parties and candidates of organizing poll-watching programs to monitor elections may lessen the confidence of the public in the security of the voting process and lead to increased cynicism. That is not a result that we should encourage as citizens of a great democracy. Our goal must be to encourage participation in the political process while maintaining the security of elections and voting



1 Hans von Spakovsky is an attorney and government affairs consultant and a member of the Board of Advisors of the Georgia Public Policy Foundation, as well as the Voting Integrity Project. He is also a member of the Fulton County Board of Registration and Elections. The Georgia Public Policy Foundation is an independent, nonpartisan organization dedicated to keeping all Georgians informed about their government and to providing practical ideas on key public policy issues. The Foundation believes in and actively supports private enterprise, limited government and personal responsibility. Nothing written here is to be construed as an attempt to aid or hinder the passage of any bill before the U.S. Congress or the Georgia Legislature.

2 Using a percentage of the population eligible to vote rather than the percentage of registered voters is a more accurate comparison from year to year, as the number of registered voters fluctuates. All figures for turnout provided in this article are a percentage of the voting-age population.

3 Senate Bill 235 was introduced in the Georgia General Assembly in the 1999 session. Although the bill passed the Senate, it did not make it to the floor of the House for consideration.

4 Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Iowa, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, and Wisconsin. Seventeen states have also instituted some form of liberal absentee balloting that allows a voter to vote absentee without having to state any reason.

5 Report released February 8, 1999, by the Committee for the Study of the American Electorate, 421 New Jersey Avenue, Washington, D.C. 20003.

6 Id.

7 Id.

8 Senate Bill 235, Section 13, page 10.

9 "Board Calls for Early Voting on Bond Election," The School Report, Bastrop Independent School District, March 1997.

10 "Vote Manipulation Suit Filed Against BISD," The Bastrop Advertiser, July 24, 1997. The bond issue was approved by a vote of only 1,823 to 1,627. During early voting, the issue passed 819 to 394; on election day, it failed 1,233 to 1,004.

11 Baird lost his 1996 race by 887 late-counted absentee ballots. "Growing Use of Mail Voting Puts its Stamp on Campaigns, Early Voters are Targeted, Reducing Election Day Focus," The Washington Post, November 29, 1998, Page A01.

12 Id.

13 Id. Fulton County, the largest county in Georgia, has almost 300 precincts. Local officials would have to decide how many of those precincts should be opened for early voters.

14 "Early Voting," Margaret Rosenfield, National Clearinghouse on Election Administration, April 1994, page 46. As another example, Dallas County incurred $465,608 in early voting costs in the 1992 election.

15 Senate Bill 235, Section 13, page 11, 14, and 15.

16 "Early Voting," page 4.

17 Turnout in Fulton County in the 1996 general election was 60% or 253,699 voters.

18 O.C.G.A Sec. 21-2-231.

19 Id.

20 Voting Integrity Project v. Bomer, Civ. No. H-99-0247 (S.D. Tex).

21 1 U.S.C. Sec. 1, 2 U.S.C. Sec. 7, and 3 U.S.C. Sec. 1.

22 Foster v. Love, 522 U.S. 67 (1997).

http://www.gppf.org/pubs/analyses/earlyvoting.html




312 posted on 11/23/2002 9:46:12 PM PST by TheLion
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To: TheLion
At least Georgia makes the effort to purge the rolls of dead people. That's more than I can say for Arkansas. Good information. I think early voting is a bad idea. Too many ways to manipulate results.
313 posted on 11/23/2002 9:56:02 PM PST by sweetliberty
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To: sweetliberty
"manipulate results"....a rat's best hope!

Here is another good article on early voting and absentee voting.

"The Dangers of Voting outside the Booth".

http://www.aei.org/ra/raorns010803.htm

314 posted on 11/23/2002 10:14:15 PM PST by TheLion
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To: TheLion
Spakovsky makes some very good points and seems to have done extensive research. He touched upon one reason voters don't turn out in droves when he porposed, Why, contrary to expectations, would turnout worsen in states that have adopted early voting? CSAE concluded that early voters are probably individuals "who are sufficiently motivated that they would likely vote anyway and because it is so easy, they tend to forget to do their duty."

Another reason I might add is that in many cases a voter has little to choose from. This is usualy the case when both, or all candidates are "crooks," "scumbags," or just plain old no good. Thus opening the door of "The Spirit Of What's The Use."

I was surprised that it took so far into the piece for him to write, "Under the authority of the Constitution, federal law specifies a single federal election day (the Tuesday after the first Monday in November) as the exclusive day throughout the U.S. for balloting for U.S. Representatives, U.S. Senators, and Presidential Electors.

I know what a lot of you are thinkingg, "Since when does a rat pay any attention to the Constitution?" After all, a recednt mantra we have been hearing is "It was written by dead white people who owned slaves," and "a living document."

Hogwash! While it has been a number of years since I took Civics, I would wager, with political correctness, inspired by the father of communism and modified by socialists in California, that the duty of every citizen to vote is not even mentioned.

315 posted on 11/24/2002 3:42:07 AM PST by Budge
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To: TheLion
Excellent piece. Ornstein hit the nail on the head.

Many state secretaries of state and local election officials who were contacted by the Constitution Project brushed off or bristled at these criticisms. They focused instead on the convenience for voters of filling out a ballot at home and sticking an envelope in the mail, the economies of using fewer poll workers and voting machines, and an assumption—which the commissions on voting did not find to be borne out—that alternative voting enhances participation in elections. For election officials in Oregon and Washington, the belief in the efficacy of voting by mail has taken on almost religious significance.

But the consensus of the social scientists, political philosophers, elected officials and others on the commissions that studied voting is in the opposite direction. The National Commission on Federal Election Reform, led by Presidents Ford and Carter, said it was troubled by the trend toward mail voting, early voting in person and absentee voting without requiring an excuse. “Though this trend is justified as promoting voter turnout, the evidence for this effect is thin,” its report said. “Analysts have even noted the possibility that voter turnout in such states may eventually decline, as the civic significance of Election Day loses its meaning.”

The report from Caltech and M.I.T. recommends: “Restrict or abolish on-demand absentee voting in favor of in-person early voting.” And the Constitution Project report decries unlimited absentee balloting and votes by mail, strongly endorsing “the proposition that voting at the polls serves basic and historically rooted objectives” and adding: “The gathering of citizens to vote is a fundamental act of community and citizenship. It provides the greatest security for enabling voters to cast their ballots free of coercion. It facilitates prompt counting and verification of results.”

To many, anything that makes it easier for people to vote is automatically a good idea. It will be a Herculean task to reverse this kind of thinking, especially in the West. But we should be doing everything possible to keep alternative voting from expanding until Election Day becomes a meaningless time. As Congress and the states prepare to move on election reform, they should keep in mind the consensus view of every major panel that has examined this issue."

"A Herculean task..." There it is, FReepers. Are we up to it?

316 posted on 11/24/2002 4:10:02 AM PST by Budge
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To: patriciaruth
My impression is either Tancredo isn't letting us know everything (although, I certainly didn't get that impression when he spoke to O'Reilly, and I would think O'Reilly would have had the same question in his mind, and tried to find it out himself, prior to the interview, and then ask Tancredo during the interview about "it," but nothing like that happened) OR there's a reason unknown to "us" peons as to what the strategery here is, and Tancredo maybe doesn't know what that is either, and he's going full steam ahead anyways.....maybe Bush told him there's another reason he, at this time, choses not to disclose.......I don't know. I find it odd; I don't take Bush to act like this unless there's some reason for it, either.
317 posted on 11/24/2002 5:46:48 AM PST by nicmarlo
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To: ForGod'sSake
the size areawise is actually very small; it's impact is HUGE

This is true; however, it is more widespread than I believe people realize....these events, of course, go off the radar quite fast, or are never reported to begin with (media are the Rats best friends), so the average person forgets about all the fraud, unless it becomes like a floriduh fraud...which demanded media attention, unfortunately, for months. But even then, focus was not put on the RATS doing things like putting votomatic machines in their vehicles. I bet the average person doesn't know about that, just like we probably don't know about lots more stuff that went on down there at that time.

318 posted on 11/24/2002 6:30:33 AM PST by nicmarlo
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To: Budge
Near the end of Spakovshy's comments, he mentions possible violations of federal election law and pending action. This could become a significant basis on which to curtail early voting. Creating zillions of absentee ballots to mail to constituents is really ripe for possible fraud. BTW, Republicans mail these also. I read an article mentioning 50,000 mailed in North Dakota.
319 posted on 11/24/2002 9:29:36 AM PST by TheLion
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To: TheLion
" I read an article mentioning 50,000 mailed in North Dakota"

I didn't think there were that many people in North Dakota. LOL!

320 posted on 11/24/2002 10:01:34 AM PST by sweetliberty
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