01 July 17
The Trump administration’s ‘election integrity’ commission is declaring war on voters – our democratic legitimacy be damned
he
most important aspect of any democratic election is participation. A
democracy gains its legitimacy through elections only so far as those
elections represent the will of the people. Limit voter participation,
and there is a direct correlation between the legitimacy of an election
and the democratic system. President Trump and Vice-President Pence’s
“election integrity” commission is unequivocally declaring war on voters
– our democratic legitimacy be damned.
The commission recently sent a letter to all 50 states
asking that they provide all the names and associated birthdays, last
four digits of social security numbers, addresses, political parties,
and voting histories since 2006 of people on their voter rolls. This
letter is helping to lay the groundwork for nationalized voter
suppression.
The commission is requesting the same information that
Republican state governments have used to create hyper-partisan
gerrymandering and enact restrictive voter ID laws. Such measures have
been disturbingly successful at suppressing voting of minority and
low-income citizens, groups that tend to vote with Democrats. This
assault on voters might seem farfetched, except that we’ve seen this
strategy too many times before to claim ignorance now.
After slavery ended, white elites invented felony
disenfranchisement as a means to delegitimize black citizens and prevent
them from gaining influence. We saw Jim Crow gut-punch our democracy in
yet another attempt to disenfranchise minorities. We are witnessing
history repeating itself.
Nationally, the Democratic party is gaining support as
the country’s demographics become increasingly diverse. The majority of
black, Native American, Hispanic and Asian voters vote as Democrats.
The Republican party has known for several years now that its best
tactic to cling to power is not to build a party worth supporting, but
to deny participation in the political process to Democratic party
voters.
Making matters worse, the Department of Justice’s
Civil Rights Office, long heralded as the ultimate guarantor of civil
rights, including voting rights, might unknowingly be supporting the
commission’s efforts. The Civil Rights Office sent out a letter on
Wednesday, the same day as the commission sent its letter, seeking
information from states on how they maintain their voter rolls. The
office charged with upholding the 1965 Voting Rights Act must resist
playing a leading role in further dismantling this most fundamental
democratic right.
I would expect these actions from the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, or any of the other authoritarian regimes we have
sanctioned around the world – regimes that stay in power by suppressing
their people and manipulating election results. We must not lie to
ourselves when we see the warning signs here at home. This commission is
a harbinger of a top-down, White House-endorsed assault on voters,
specifically Democratic voters: the same voters who denied Trump the
popular vote.
State leaders have a moral and constitutional
obligation to our democracy and to their citizens to refuse to cooperate
with this commission.
States should refuse to hand over any of the requested
voter information, as California, Virginia, Rhode Island and Kentucky
have refused to do at this writing. The Connecticut, Oklahoma and North
Carolina secretaries of state, on the other hand, have agreed to send
“publicly available” information to the commission. This is a mistake.
Our democracy cannot afford to turn over any
information now and ask questions later. States turning over any
information, including publicly available information, legitimize the
commission and betray the trust and privacy of voters. Having publicly
available information for in-state use is different from providing
information for a national voter database that will be placed at the
hands of nefarious actors. States must take a stand to protect their
voters’ most fundamental democratic right.
Additionally, Democrats must refuse to participate in
the commission. The secretaries of state for New Hampshire and Maine
should step down from the commission immediately. Participation risks
granting legitimacy where there can be none. Two lone Democrats on this
commission will stand no chance of preventing the pre-cooked outcomes.
Instead, they and their states are being used to cloak the commission in
the guise of bipartisanship. If Democrats refuse to participate, the
commission will be left with no clothes on.
The litany of research on voting in recent years has
failed to come up with but a handful of voter fraud cases. On the other
hand, voter suppression techniques, such as those employed by the
Republican party, effectively disenfranchise scores of voters across the
country. If the real goal of the administration is election integrity,
the stated objective from day one should have been to maximize voter
participation.
Rather than target minority voters with a modern gloss on McCarthyism, we should be prioritizing a 21st-century Voting Rights Act to protect voting rights and increase access to the ballot box.
Rather than target minority voters with a modern gloss on McCarthyism, we should be prioritizing a 21st-century Voting Rights Act to protect voting rights and increase access to the ballot box.
Rather than voter ID laws that disenfranchise certain
demographics, a new Voting Rights Act could set a national ID standard,
granting maximum flexibility to voters. It could also ban felony
disenfranchisement in national elections and require publication of new
electoral changes to help educate voters.
The options are there to strengthen our democracy and
truly protect “one person, one vote”. Instead, this commission appears
intent on nationalizing the Republican party’s strategy of “one
Anglo-Saxon, financially successful person, one vote”.
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