• Home
  • About IBW
    • IBW Mission Statement
    • IBW Board of Directors
    • About the President
    • IBW 990 Tax Statements
    • Contact Us
  • News & Commentary
    • Malcolm and Manning
    • The Task of the Prophet in the Age of Angst
    • The Conspiracy to Steal the 2012 Election
    • Julianne Malveaux Archive
    • A Sugar Coated Satan Sandwich with Strychnine on the Side: Will the Debt Ceiling Fix Bring Double Dip Recession?
    • Vantage Point
      • The Emancipation Proclamation: From 3/5 Human to Second Class Citizenship
      • The Nguzo Saba and Kwanzaa in a Time of Crisis
      • Toward State of the Black World Conference III
      • Implanting a “Black Footprint” on an Economic Renaissance for Haiti
      • Occupy Wall Street: Black Voices for Economic Justice Must Be Heard
      • Pass the Bill Now
      • African Leaders and Nations Must Be Accountable
      • Implanting a “Black Footprint” on an Economic Renaissance for Haiti
      • Beyond Obama and the Democrats, Part IV – Creating a Force for Progressive Change
      • Beyond Obama and the Democrats, Part III – A Progressive National Convention to Galvanize a Force for Change
      • Beyond Obama and the Democrats, Part II – Reclaiming the Progressive Legacy: Defending the “Many Against the Few”
      • Obama as a One Term President: Implications for the Progressive Movement
      • Can We All Get Along?
      • Obama to the GOP – I´ll Huff and I´ll Puff and …. Bluff
      • Obama as a One Term President: Implications for the Progressive Movement
      • African Americans Must Be in the Forefront of the Fight
      • Vantage Point: Declaring War on the “War on Drugs”
      • Celebrating the Life and Legacy of Dr. James Turner
      • The “Declining Significance” of Black History
      • The Reagan I Remember
      • The Reagan I Remember
      • Contradictions and Hypocrisy Haunt U.S. Policy in the Middle East
      • Beyond “Milk Toast” Martin
      • The Haiti Support Project
      • Congressman Meeks to Join Pilgrimage
      • Haiti Crisis Statement
      • Diaspora Conference Statement
      • Third Pilgrimmage to Haiti
      • Haiti Relief Fund
    • Research Policy and Advocacy (RPA)
      • Articles & Essays
      • Policy and Position Papers
    • Press Releases & Statements
    • Demographic Shifts and Black Political Power
  • Initiatives / Projects / Programs
    • Black Family Summit
      • Archive
      • Black Leadership Dialogue
      • Statement of Intent
    • Damu Smith Leadership Development and Organizer Training Institute Background and Training Design
    • Research Consortium
    • Shirley Chisolm Presidential Accountability Commision
      • Assessment of President Barack Obama´s 2011 State of the Union Address
      • Commissioners
      • SCPAC President Obama´s 2011 State of the Union Address
      • Report Card on President Obama: Year Two – Policy and Legislative Impacts on the Black Community
      • Launch of Chisholm Commission
    • Haiti Support Project
      • Oasis Institute Campaign
      • Mission Statement
      • Haiti Relief Fund
      • Model City Initiative
      • Press Releases, Statements, Reports, Communiques
      • Other Documents
    • Delcaring War on The “War on Drugs”
    • Martin Luther King/Malcolm X Community Revitalization Initiative
    • State of the Black World Forums
    • State of the Black World Conferences
  • Support & Donations
    • How to Donate
    • How to Volunteer
    • How to Become a Sponsor
    • Purchasing IBW and HSP Products
  • Events
    • Special Black History Month Forum: We Remember Malcolm
    • Time to Heal Our Families & Communities
    • Video Event: June 17th Forum – Ending the War on Drugs
    • Pilgrimage to Haiti
    • Live Video Event: The Meaning of Manning Marable’s Biography of Malcolm X
    • Toward An African Renaissance
  • Friend me on FacebookFollow me on TwitterWatch me on YouTube
  • Home / News & Commentary / Julianne Malveaux / The Conspiracy to Steal the 2012 Election

    The Conspiracy to Steal the 2012 Election

    June 23, 2011

    THE CONSPIRACY TO STEAL THE 2012 ELECTION

    BY JULIANNE MALVEAUX

     

    Attorney Barbara Arnwine, leader of the DC based Lawyer’s Committee for Civil Rights Under Law is on a mission. She wants to make sure that every citizen has the right to vote.  On its face, it seems like a retro mission, since the right to vote has long been established.  But one look at her Map of Shame, a map she shared at the Rainbow PUSH Coalition’s 40th Anniversary and annual conference, and the mission becomes quite urgent.

    States are passing laws that require people to have a government issued photo ID in order to vote. Arnwine’s Map of Shame shows 8 states – Kansas, Texas, Wisconsin, Indiana, Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia, and South Carolina –that require a government-issued photo ID for voting.   Several other require proof of citizenship, which may mean the birth certificate President Obama was challenged with producing.  Sounds suspiciously close to a passbook to me.   Often when these laws are enforced, the government issued photo ID must include a “current” address, which poses barriers to those who have moved.  Americans have a mobility rate of 14 percent, and African Americans have a mobility rate of 18 percent.  In the middle of a move, many do not return to the Department of Motor Vehicles to change the address on their driver’s license.

    Government-issued photo ID does not include a Social Security card, but is usually restricted to a driver’s license or a passport.   Eleven percent of all Americans, and twenty-five percent of African Americans, does not have driver’s licenses.   In Georgia, 36 percent of those over 75 do not have a driver’s license.  What about passports?  The process of obtaining a passport often takes weeks, and costs upwards of $100.  Requiring a government-issued photo ID may be a burden for some Americans.  Yet that is precisely the intent that legislators that are assaulting voting rights have.  When elections are close, it is in their interest to exclude young people, seniors, and African Americans.  These voter ID laws do exactly that.  Additionally, in some high unemployment states, those who owe child support cannot get a driver’s license.  Talk about a double whammy.  You may need a car to get to work or look for work to pay child support, but without a car you can’t look for work or get to work.

    The Map of Shame shows that more than twenty states are considering the repressive laws that have been passed in the eight states that have frontally attacked voting rights, along with the two, Ohio and Florida that require proof of citizenship.  Is it any coincidence that these are “swing states”?  How much does this have to do with the upcoming 2012 election, where the stakes are high and the Tea Party seems determined to push our country backwards?

    This attack on voting surely has nothing to do with real voter fraud.  A five-year investigation by the Bush Department of Justice showed a scant 86 voter fraud conviction, and most of these cases could not have been prevented by voter ID laws.  Another study showed that only 24 people were convicted of or pled guilty to illegal voting between 2002 and 2005.  Again, photo ID laws would not have prevented this fraud.  Instead of attempting to suppress the vote, we ought to be encouraging it – we have one of the lowest levels of voter participation in the world.

    In the middle of an economic crisis, legislators are passing laws that will cost millions of dollars to implement.  Is this the price of democracy, of voting integrity?  Hardly.  It is the price of chicanery.  It is officially sanctioned voter suppression that, when combined with informal intimidating tactics already keep millions from the polls.  For example, in Georgia, at the cusp of an election, those who owed child support were sent letters warning them that their status might be checked at the polls.  In an urban center, during an anticipated close election, voters in some precincts were called and told the election had been decided (it had not been) and they did not need to vote.  Furthermore, efforts that have been made in the past to expand the electorate are now being eliminated.  In some states, early voting and Sunday voting has been eliminated; in others, churches and community centers can no longer register voters.  Civic organizations that once registered voters now will not because laws have been passed that make it difficult to comply with laws (such as registrations must be turned in within 24 or 48 hours), and that impose harsh penalties for noncompliance.

    Some states are eliminating precinct voting.  When you voted in your precinct you could walk down the street or around the block to vote.  With “regional voting centers” several precincts are combined and it may be necessary to take public transportation, if there is such a thing in your area, to get to a polling place.  If there is such a thing.  Repressive states are refusing federal funds for public transportation because they have absolutely no interest in a mobile African American population.

    The bottom line – many are planning to make voting harder in 2012 than it was in 2008.  They are planning to steal the 2012 election, and activist lawyers like Barbara Arnwine are passionately fighting back.   Check out the Map of Shame at www.lawyerscommittee.org.


    Julianne Malveaux is President of Bennett College for Women.  Her most recent book, Surviving and Thriving:  365 Facts in Black Economic History is available at www.lastwordprod.com.

    Dr. Julianne Malveaux is an economist, author and commentator, and the Founder & Thought Leader of Last Word Productions, Inc., a multimedia production company.

    Last Word Productions, Inc. is a multimedia production company that serves as a vehicle for the work and products of Dr. Julianne Malveaux. For the last 15 years the company has centered its efforts on Dr. Malveaux’s public speaking appearances, her work as a broadcast and print journalist, and also as an author. Currently, Julianne Malveaux is President of Bennett College For Women in Greensboro, North Carolina and author of Surviving and Thriving: 365 Facts in Black Economic History.

    To find more of Dr. Julianne Malveaux’s columns, work and appearances please visit:

    www.juliannemalveaux.com and www.lastwordprod.com

     

    Share on TwitterShare via email


    June 17th Forum
    Ending the War on Drugs

    View All Videos


    Receive periodic newsletters and action alerts about Institute of the Back World
    and Haiti Support Project
    Programs and Initiatives.

    Name:
    Email:
     

    Black Family Summit

    A collaborative of national Black professional organizations dedicated to promoting holistic principles, policies and practices to strengthen Black families and communities.
    Read More

    Damu Smith Leadership Development and Organizer Training Institute

    An Initiative devoted to providing training in the principles of community organizing and
    servant leadership.
    Read More

    Research Consortium

    Collaborative of progressive, African-centered scholars, think tanks and research centers dedicated to utilizing theoretical and applied research to address issues of vital concern to people of African descent and enhance the development of Black communities.
    Read More

    Shirley Chisolm Presidential Accountability Commission

    Group of leading Black scholars and activists charged with monitoring the executive branch/presidential administrations of the U.S. government for progress on the Black Agenda/ issues of importance to people of African descent in the U.S. and globally.
    Read More

    Haiti Support Project

    An Initiative committed to “Building a Constituency for Haiti in the United States,” focusing on mobilizing/organizing African Americans and other people of African descent to strengthen the process of democracy and development in the world’s first Black Republic.
    Read More

  • Home |
  • About IBW |
  • News & Commentary |
  • Initiatives / Projects / Programs |
  • Support & Donations |
  • Events |

  • © 2011 Institute of the Black World. All Rights Reserved.