Today's Article
The election 'will be
meaningless if
Americans are
prevented from
casting their votes
and having them
counted,' says Sen.
Leahy (D-VT).
The American Spark
Justice Department Fails--Or Refuses--To Stop Voter Intimidation
By Cliff Montgomery - Sept. 12th, 2008
The Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday conducted a hearing to examine how the Justice Department
will protect the rights of every American voter during the general election this November.
Of special interest may be the statement delivered by Judiciary panel Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-VT). The
chairman provided a number of startling facts about recent voter intimidation which every American should
know.
The American Spark has provided many of Chairman Leahy’s most telling points below:
"The Committee today continues its crucial role overseeing the Department of Justice by examining the plans
of the Civil Rights Division and Criminal Division to ensure that the voting rights of all Americans are protected
in the upcoming national election. Protecting the precious right to vote is one of the primary missions of the
Justice Department.
"Today, less than two months from a presidential election, we examine the adequacy of the Department’s
preparation to safeguard the rights of all Americans to vote and have their votes count. [...]
"For the past several months, our Nation has been engaged in a critical debate over the future direction of our
country. This national discussion will be meaningless if Americans are prevented from casting their votes and
having them counted.
"Not only does the right to vote secure the effective exercise of all other rights, it also protects a basic principle
of our democracy: All American citizens deserve to have their voices heard in their government. The
government’s duty to ensure Americans’ fundamental right to vote should be above politics.
"Yet, during the most recent mid-term elections, we witnessed partisan attempts to obstruct the path to the
ballot box for political gain.
"In Arizona, we saw overt threats by armed vigilantes attempting to intimidate Hispanic-American voters at the
polls.
"We witnessed cross burnings intended to intimidate African-American voters on the eve of an election in
Louisiana.
"We also saw organized efforts in Maryland to deceive minority and low-income voters with false information
about polling locations and phony endorsements.
"Two years after opening investigations into these incidents, we still await answers from the Justice
Department on who will be held accountable for these organized efforts to suppress voters.
"We also know that photo ID laws have already disenfranchised voters this year. In a committee hearing four
months ago, Stanford Law Professor Pam Karlan informed us that '[t]here are already more nuns in Indiana
that have been disenfranchised in one election than all the proven in-person vote fraud in Indiana history.'
"I remain disappointed that the acting head of the Civil Rights Division-–an institution long committed to
expanding voter access-–asked the Nation’s High Court to uphold Indiana’s photo ID law, even though it will
limit minority voters’ access to the ballot.
"These observations come at a time when the Justice Department’s reputation has already been tarnished by
revelations that it allowed politics to affect-–and infect-–the Department’s priorities, from law enforcement to
the operation of the crucial Civil Rights Division. On the brink of an important and historic presidential election,
the American people deserve a Justice Department that will protect the right to vote without even a hint of
partisanship.
"I [therefore] look forward to learning what preparation the Department has made in advance of Election Day
to safeguard the right to vote.
"[For instance], what is the Justice Department doing prior to Election Day to prevent [further] problems at the
polls?
"During the recent re-authorization of the Voting Rights Act, we learned that the ongoing presence of
discrimination in voting underscored the continued need for Federal oversight of elections.
"I hope today the Department will offer us more transparency on how many Federal observers and monitors it
will use this November, where it plans to send them, and how it chooses where they go.
"I also look forward to hearing if the Department will consult and coordinate with civil rights organizations to
identify potential voter suppression hotspots."
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