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March 21, 2005

Your Vote: Worthless in the Eyes of Media

Judging from the lack of news media coverage, you probably haven’t heard about today’s House Committee hearing

“There’s reason to suspect that our 2004 election was stolen.”

That’s a strong accusation. Daring to utter such a statement has gained citizens little more than a label of “paranoid conspiracy theorist”. The news media has shied away from talking about it, apparently afraid to be seen as “liberal media” and having a massive advertising-boycott campaign mounted against them by right-wing activists.

In January, Senator Barbara Boxer (D CA) stood up to vote against the certification of the Ohio Electors. In the House, Republican Representatives accused her of aiding terrorism and betraying our troops in Iraq.

Recent developments will show you that this is not a matter which revolves around delusion, nor does it indicate antiAmericanism.

A House Administration Committee field hearing will be held today in Columbus, Ohio. You can access information about it online: “Committee to Continue Oversight on Election Reform with a Field Hearing in Ohio on Monday.”

The committee is chaired by Rep. Bob Ney, Republican of Ohio. I have my doubts about the progress that will be made by this committee, having already read Rep. Ney’s comments about the 2004 election:

€œDespite the formidable challenges faced by election administrators and notwithstanding the predictions of the skeptics, the 2004 election was a tremendous success and there is growing evidence that this was due in large part to the bipartisan Help America Vote Act. To paraphrase Mark Twain, the rumors of the demise of the American election system were greatly exaggerated and those who still continue to insist otherwise are not only wrong on the facts, but their baseless criticisms are a disservice to the thousands of state and local election workers who did a very good job..”

There are currently TWO (2) stories about the Congressional field hearing available on Google search.

It would appear, if you look at the media coverage, that no one cares about the integrity of our electoral process. Yet, I know that is not true. In an Annenberg poll taken on election eve, only 62% of voters felt that they could trust the integrity of the process. (*And voters committed to Bush were far more confident).

When - and why - did news-reporting about the fight for the right to vote leave the forefront?

At Daily Kos, a diarist named ‘Freedom‘ has said that all the problems we see in America and the world today will mean “NOTHING if, come next election, the people are not given the means to exercise their right to vote.”

At the Common Ills blog, there is disappointment and frustration at the lack of media and blog coverage. They report that electiononline.org was one of the only online information outlets that cited the hearing in an Associated Press story in yesterday’s New York Times (”Counting of 2004 Provisional Ballots Varied Widely, Study Finds“).

I think it’s high time we started talking about this. We need to pressure the news media to talk about it as if it means something - because it means everything.

As it just so happens, the front pages of most of today’s newspapers are slathered with heartstring-twanging news about Terry Schiavo and the fight to save what little life she has left in her. Meanwhile, the life of our democracy is nearly as fragile and brain-dead as Mrs. Schiavo. I cannot help but think this is a very convenient way for the mainstream news editors to avoid giving too loud of a voice on news that is material to our most important right as citizens - the right for our voice to be heard through our vote in elections we can trust.

The media’s negligence allows people like Ohio’s Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell to virtually thumb his nose at concerned citizens. In the recent past, Blackwell
- has refused to be deposed about the Ohio election,
- has refused to appear before Congress ( Lawmakers were frustrated with Blackwell when he did not attend a Feb. 9 hearing in Washington, especially when they discovered that he was in the area that day)
- has refused to answer questions from members of the House Judiciary Committee who have been investigating allegations of election fraud.

Even today, Blackwell is expected to defend Ohio’s electoral process and try to slink away with nothing more than a simple accusation of partisanship.

From the Beacon Journal:

A report prepared by the Democratic staff of the House Judiciary Committee accused Ohio election officials of disenfranchising minority and Democratic voters by misallocating voting machines in their districts and restricting the use of provisional ballots. Blackwell’s order that registrations must be on a certain weight of paper also drew fire in the staff report.

Blackwell has denied the staff’s allegations.

“It was a stunning and disgraceful display demonstrating that there are those in Congress who are very willing to cast aside the Constitution and the lawfully certified vote of the people to wage a nasty and disingenuous partisan attack,” Blackwell said in his testimony.

Political writer Christopher Hitchens has a new article in Vanity Fair entitled “Ohio’s Odd Numbers.” The lead-in states

No conspiracy theorist, and no fan of John Kerry’s, the author nevertheless found the Ohio polling results impossible to swallow: Given what happened in that key state on Election Day 2004, both democracy and common sense cry out for a court-ordered inspection of its new voting machines.

Hitchens forwards the belief that the thinking-caps Democrats have been wearing are not composed of “tin foil”:

“..there is one soothing explanation that I don€™t trust anymore. It was often said, in reply to charges of vote tampering, that it would have had to be €œa conspiracy so immense€ as to involve a dangerously large number of people. Indeed, some Ohio Democrats themselves laughed off some of the charges, saying that they too would have had to have been part of the plan. The stakes here are very high: one defector or turncoat with hard evidence could send the principals to jail forever and permanently discredit the party that had engaged in fraud.

I had the chance to spend quality time with someone who came to me well recommended, who did not believe that fraud had yet actually been demonstrated, whose background was in the manufacture of the machines, and who wanted to be anonymous. It certainly could be done, she said, and only a very, very few people would have to be €œin on it.€

Some additional background information and news:

Twenty three House members have endorsed a vote-tabulation devistiture campaign known as the Velvet Revolution. The House members signed on to Waters/Conyers’ letter to voting machine companies, which have been given until April 15th to reply. Members vow to withhold HAVA funding from companies who do not comply with standards set forth in the campaign. Click here for list of signers, the full letter to the voting companies, and a letter to VR from John Conyers. Brad Friedman, founder of the campaign, says that he expects to gain support from some “big names” in the Senate.

Last week, David Cobb, who was the presidential candidate for the Green party, sent a letter to the voting machine companies of America, formally endorsing the Velvet Revolution’s campaign. Mr. Cobb’s attorneys, along with Libertarian Party presidential candidate Michael Badnarik, have jointly requested a Ohio election recount. The case is still pending in the Eastern Division of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, before Judge Sargus.

John Kerry and John Edwards, through their Ohio attorney, have filed a one sentence statement with the Judge which supports the Cobb and Badnarik position. John Kerry’s attorney has also filed a short, two page summary charting inconsistencies observed by Democratic Party witnesses to the recount.

Additional information about the recount and the entire 102 page report by the House Judiciary Committee’s Democratic staff can be found at http://www.votecobb.org.

When four attorneys in Ohio sued that state to discover details of how voting was conducted in that state, they report they were slapped with a massive and expensive lawsuit engineered by Ohio’s Secretary of State, Ken Blackwell (also co-chair of the Ohio Bush For President campaign) and Ohio Attorney General, Republican Jim Petro. The Ohio lawyer/activists have launched a legal defense fund (information available at http://freepress.org/store.php#donate) to help them fight both for an exposé of Ohio irregularities and to defend themselves against this attack by the Republican officials who control the voting systems in that state.

There’s logic and reason behind the suspicion that our election was hijacked again in 2004

Sometimes it seems like we’re living in a world I like to call Bushworld - a topsy-turvy rightwing-heavy universe where everything that truly matters is given the lowest priority. Our elections mean everything to the survival of our republican democracy. The Washington Times has given a big megaphone to Ferrell Blount, Republican North Carolina state chairman, who is whining about John Edwards getting some free “visibility” at Chapel Hill, but stop a moment to listen to their deafening silence about John Edwards’ “media-invisiblity” in relation to today’s Congressional Committee investigation about the state of the American electoral process.

“There’s reason to suspect that our 2004 election was stolen.”

This is our trust in the right to vote we’re talking about, people.

Our one and only vote.

Pay attention to what’s happening today in Columbus, Ohio.

- Jude

7 Responses to “Your Vote: Worthless in the Eyes of Media”

  1. Gus Says:

    Sometimes when the shepherd cries wolf, there really are wolves…

    I think that’s what bothers me most about the black hole this issue has fallen into: If there was no fraud, an investigation will reveal that with only the expense of some money and time. But if there WAS fraud, and there’s no investigation, we’re just guaranteeing that future elections are equally corrupt, and that’s an infinitely greater expense we cannot afford to pay.

  2. blues Says:

    At least 30% of the votes of 2004 were entered into machines that just sent them into limbo. Unless we just get ballots that are HAND-MARKED and HAND-RETURNED, preferrably into steel containers that weigh 100lbs empty and only hold 1,000 to 10,000 ballots… You can kiss democracy goodby.

    Of course, the elitish-owned media system and academic system, etc., would rather not be bothered with the so-called “will of the people.”

    All the REAL LIBERALS and REAL CONSERVATIVES fully accept this. Only the NEOLIBERALS and NEOCONSERVATIVES want to bury democracy. It’s not “liberal versus conservative” at all. It’s actually the REALS versus the NEOS.

  3. Gus Says:

    Hi, blues,

    I was sort of playing devil’s advocate, making an argument fence sitters might understand. Personally, I have little doubt the fraud actually happened and have long believed most of this admin’s key figures should be doing long terms in Leavenworth, not just for this. To me, conspiring to corrupt our electoral process is treason and I’m sure some of those people knew all the details. It’s up to honest Americans to find out which ones.

  4. blues Says:

    The entire corporate media system is systematically ignoring what every body in the U.S. knows to be the real issues. Body-bags. Voting. Debt. Military hardware ground to trash by Arab sand. Oil depletion. Universal surveillance. CULTURAL EMPTINESS.

    It may well be time to stop asking the bankrupt media system to address these things. Maybe we will all get arrested for wearing T-shirts that bear big X’s over logos for CBS, CNN, NBC, PBS, ABC. Fox, New York Times, et.al.

  5. Arvin Says:

    It may well be time to stop asking the bankrupt media system to address these things.

    I think this is a very, very thought-provoking comment.

  6. Jude Nagurney Camwell Says:

    I have an update at my own website and I thought you might be interested to see it. Blackwell is arrogant, arrogant, and then more arrogant.

    Blackwell Gives the Finger to Voters

    The “bankrupt media” doesn’t seem to care about the millions upon millions of Americans who are deeply concerned that what occurred in Ohio was a hijacking of the presidential election and proof that the electoral system has little integrity.

    What are we to do? We could start by writing our Representatives. If we were as organized as the right wing, we would be mounting a huge letter-writing campaign to all the media outlets. Where are the fierce ‘Easongate” and “Rathergate”-style campaigns of the left? If we sit and bitch, nothing will ever get accomplished.

    I get nauseous thinking that we are being forced to act like them, but I think that’s what it’s going to boil down to.

    Seeing Blackwell skate away with his finger pointing at us and accusing us of being liars and partisans while the media sits on their numb tails is extremely repulsive.

  7. Gus Says:

    One step might be to push our individual congresscritters to actually charge Blackwell with contempt of Congress & have him locked up. (The fact that many of us also have contempt of Congress today is irrelevant: WE weren’t called to testify before it.)

    As someone who has been part of the mainstream media for years off and on, describing the entire media system as “bankrupt” bothers me. A lot of reporters take journalism seriously and try their best to get to the facts, lay out both sides, and cover the issues in depth. The problem is that there’s often too much pressure to pump out something to meet deadline and too much follow the leader-type storymongering that’s driven not at all by journalistic goals but by profit margins.

    If anything, the media isn’t “bankrupt;” the problem is that it’s TOO wealthy and so obsessed by profits it’s hard to get higher-ups to approve the time to do real research b/c time costs money.

    In some cases, there’s also an issue of having reporters who have been in their beats too long, creating the problem of “If I write this, I lose all access to these sources forever.” They often know the background issues in depth, but are afraid to get shut out. New blood in the form of freethinking people who actually believe in the PURPOSE of journalism would make a difference.

    Those issues exist in print media, but are far more noticable in TV, where “news” has long since lost most of its credibility. There, the news is little more than another entertainment show, glitz lacking depth. Unfortunately, a lot of people get most of their “news” from TV, fueling a downward spiral.