• Let us march on ballot boxes, march on ballot boxes until race-baiters disappear from the political arena. Let us march on ballot boxes until the salient misdeeds of bloodthirsty mobs will be transformed into the calculated good deeds of orderly citizens. . . .

    Let us march on ballot boxes until we send to our city councils, state legislatures, and the United States Congress, men who will not fear to do justly, love mercy, and walk humbly with thy God.

    Let us march on ballot boxes until brotherhood becomes more than a meaningless word in an opening prayer, but the order of the day on every legislative agenda.


    Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr
    "Our God Is Marching On!"
    Selma, Alabama
    March 25, 1965
    (full speech) (audio excerpt)

Using The Categories


  • Posts on this blog are tagged with categories for the state(s) in which action or news occurs. E.g., if a group from CA announces a demonstration in DC, the post gets tagged DC.

January 31, 2005

Audio: Speeches from Rally for the Republic, Faneueil Hall, Boston, MA, Jan 3, 2005

  • Robin Weingarten Campaign volunteer in Ohio, CAEF member.
  • Greg Greenway - One Man, One Woman, One Vote Musician
  • Fay Morrison Ayer Selectwoman, witness to voter intimidation and touch screen fraud in FL and OH
  • Tom Barbera Waltham Elector whose motion asking for the investigation and remedy of election violations was passed unanimously by all twelve Massachusetts Electors
  • Jeff Taylor Vermont Elector who passed a motion with the other Electors in his state for the investigation and remedy of election violations
  • Grace Ross CAEF member, Truth In Elections member.
  • Sheila Parks Vice Presidential candidate for the Green Party, Historian, Liberal talk show host
  • Donna Palermino Activist and Attorney, to speak on the legal aspects of the challenge, member CAEF
  • David Lytel Part of  the 2000 & 2004 challenges to Congress against the certification of            Electoral College votes for reasons of election fraud and civil rights violations
  • Pat LaMarche Vice Presidential candidate for the Green Party, Historian, Liberal talk show host
  • John Bonifaz General Counsel of the National Voting Rights Institute and Co-counsel for Presidential Candidates David Cobb and Michael Badnarik in their demand for a meaningful recount of 2004 in Ohio
  • Jonathan Simon Activist and Attorney, Collaborator with Steven Freeman on 2004 exit poll analysis
  • Greg Greenway -- offeratory

(from the Coalition Against Election Fraud web site.)

(Cross posted on HungryBlues.)

January 26, 2005

GONZALES VOTE GOES TO SENATE FLOOR - VOTING RIGHTS AT ISSUE

Wednesday, January 26, 2005

PROTECT VOTING RIGHTS:
HELP US STOP APPROVAL OF ALBERTO GONZALES FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL

Please call on your own Senators to object to the nomination of Alberto Gonzales for Attorney General. The Judiciary Committee just voted: 10 yeas and 8 nays on the Gonzales nomination. The votes were on party lines, with 10 Republicans and 8 Democrats on the committee. The recommendation goes to the Senate floor: it could be either today or in the next few days.

Tell your Senators that we need an Attorney General with a commitment to Civil Rights and Voting Rights. Call 1-800-839-5276 or 1-877-762-8762 connecting all offices.

In the last five years, the Department of Justice (DOJ) has DECREASED its Civil Rights enforcement dramatically. While the number of civil rights complaints has remained constant, at about 12,000 per year for the last five years, the number of defendants charged with criminal violations of the nation's civil rights laws has dropped by close to 50%, from 159 in 1999 to 84 in 2003.[1]

When it comes to the Civil Rights Division's Voting Section, which has the historic mission of protecting voting rights, it is clear that the Department of Justice

o Has failed to address allegations of voting irregularities and is not properly documenting them;

o Has replaced the protection of voting rights with the potentially discriminatory advancement of so-called "voter integrity"; and

o Has been litigating to limit the private right of action by individual citizens to enforce federal statutes guaranteeing voting rights.

J. Gerald Hebert, a former chief of the DOJ's Voting Section, said "This is the first time in history the Justice Department has gone to court to side AGAINST voters who are trying to enforce their right to vote. I think this law will mean very little if the rights of American voters have to depend on this Justice Department."[2] It is crucial that the new Attorney General demonstrate a strong commitment to fixing the damage done to voting rights under Attorney General Ashcroft. Therefore we call on the members of the Senate Judiciary Committee to object to the nomination of Alberto Gonzales on the grounds that he has no program to resurrect the DOJ's mission to protect voting rights.

A legitimate candidate for the office of US Attorney General must:

o Present a clear plan to adopt the recommendations of the US Government Accountability Office (GAO) report, "DOJ Activities To Address Past Voting Irregularities" (GAO-04-1041R).[3]

o Reverse the current Voting Section emphasis on voter "integrity" and focus on voter access.

o Return to its long standing, aggressive support of private suits to fight discrimination.

On October 14, 2004, Representatives John Conyers and Henry Waxman wrote to Attorney General John Ashcroft to express concerns about the GAO findings that:

o"The Voting Section does not have a reliable method to consistently record and document telephone calls received alleging voting irregularities";

o"The Voting Section does not routinely track its election monitoring activities through the Interactive Case Management (ICM) System, the Justice Department's formal process for tracking and managing work activities";

o"The Justice Department, due to its lack of specific information about allegations of voting irregularities, and Justice Department actions taken to address them, is unable to provide the public and Congress with clear information concerning election procedures."[4]

Since 2000, John Ashcroft has changed the original mission of the Voting Section from increasing voter access to limiting voter fraud in the name of "voter integrity." According to Stanford Law Professor Pamela S. Karlan, voter integrity is "one of those great euphemisms . . . By and large, it's been targeted at minority voters." The architects of the current Voting Section voter integrity programs are among the same people who have developed GOP Ballot Security programs since the 1960s to suppress minority voters through intimidation tactics, including voter challenges in polling places. Hans A. von Spakovsky, chief counsel to Assistant Attorney General Acosta, has said "that voting integrity will remain a focus for the Justice Department, and that voter access might best be left to volunteers." [5]

The well developed voter suppression tactics of the GOP have become part of DOJ Civil Rights enforcement.

In court battles, pre-election 2004, over how provisional ballots would be counted and the legalities of voter challenges at the polls, Bush administration lawyers argued that individual voters may not sue over violations of the voting rights set out in the Help America Vote Act. The DOJ argued, instead, that only the Attorney General has power to bring lawsuits to enforce the provisions of the 2002 law--provisions that include a requirement that states provide "uniform and nondiscriminatory" voting systems, and that they give provisional ballots to those who say they have registered but whose names do not appear on the rolls. In a 1969 US Supreme Court Ruling on enforcement of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the Justices said "the achievement of the act's laudable goal would be severely hampered ... if each citizen were required to depend solely on litigation instituted at the discretion of the attorney general."[6]

Please let your Senators and the members of the Senate Judiciary Committee know that we hold the protection of voting rights sacred among the duties of the DOJ. Call the Senators and tell them we want an Attorney General who is committed to the original mission of the Voting Section of the Civil Rights Division.

*References*
[1] "Civil Rights Enforcement By Bush Administration Lags," Transactional Records Clearinghouse, 2004,
http://trac.syr.edu/tracreports/civright/106/
[2] David G. Savage and Richard B. Schmitt, "Bush Seeks Limit to Suits Over Voting Rights," Los Angeles Times, 29 October 2004,
http://www.truthout.org/docs_04/103004U.shtml
[3] http://www.democrats.reform.house.gov/Documents/20041014092633-82277.pdf
[4] http://www.democrats.reform.house.gov/Documents/20041014092559-26084.pdf
[5] Jeffrey Toobin, "Poll Position," The New Yorker, 20 September 2004,
http://www.newyorker.com/printable/?fact/040920fa_fact
Chandler Davidson, Tanya Dunlap, Gale Kenny, and Benjamin Wise, REPUBLICAN BALLOT SECURITY PROGRAMS: VOTE PROTECTION OR MINORITY VOTE SUPPRESSION OR BOTH? A REPORT TO THE CENTER FOR VOTING RIGHTS PROTECTION, SEPTEMBER 2004,
http://www.votelaw.com/blog/blogdocs/GOP_Ballot_Security_Programs.pdf (476kb)
[6] Savage and Schmitt, "Bush Seeks Limit to Suits Over Voting Rights".

---
Coalition Against Election Fraud
web: http://www.caef.us
email: caef@caef.us

(Cross-posted at HungryBlues)

January 25, 2005

Video: Stolen Election 2004

Members of The Democratic Underground have put together a powerful home-made video on the 2004 presidential election.

It's an excellent 8 minutes and 55 seconds. Check it out:

Real media 256k stream

Real media 56 k stream (for dial-up)


(Cross-posted on HungryBlues)

January 17, 2005

CALL FOR NATIONAL INAUGURATION DAY "INVESTIGATE OHIO" FBI RALLIES

This came through the Coalition Against Election Fraud e-mail list. I strongly support this call to action (emphasis added).

For all those who would like to be protesting in Washington on Inauguration Day but will not be able to attend, this is a call to organize "Investigate Ohio" rallies at noon on Thursday, Jan. 20 at the office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation nearest you.

We see the purpose of the rallies not only to protest what appears to be the second illegitimate inauguration of George W. Bush, but more importantly to push the FBI to fully investigate the evidence of widespread vote rigging in Ohio, and by inference in other states, as documented in the historic "Preserving Democracy: What Went Wrong in Ohio" (pdf), published by the House Judiciary Committee's Democratic staff, under the leadership of Congressman John Conyers Jr.

The report, which has received no significant press attention, found: "...massive and unprecedented voter irregularities and anomalies in Ohio. In many cases these irregularities were caused by intentional misconduct and illegal behavior..."

The report also said: "...Cumulatively, these irregularities, which affected hundreds of thousands of votes and voters in Ohio, raise grave doubts regarding whether it can be said the Ohio electors, selected on December 13, 2004, were chosen in a manner that conforms to Ohio law, let alone federal requirements and constitutional standards."

Laws apparently violated include: The Voting Rights Act, the Civil Rights Act of 1968, Equal Protection, Due Process and Ohio right to vote laws. This, of course, means that there is likely no legitimacy to the 2004 Bush "election".

In spite of the exceptional documentation in the Conyers report, which formed the basis for objections to Congressional approval of the Ohio presidential vote on Jan. 6, by Barbara Boxer in the Senate and 31 House members, the FBI has failed to investigate the apparent widespread violations of Federal law.

Indeed, as of earlier this week, the FBI failed to answer a December 15 request by Congressman Conyers for investigation of possible tampering with Ohio voting machines by the firm Triad. The FBI has made no response to a request of investigation of the Presidential vote in Ohio, Florida and other states, made on December 3 by citizens of Westchester County, New York. Congressman Conyers continues to seek FBI action and to call for a full investigation of Ohio by Congress.

We see the rallies as a way of not only specifically supporting Congressman Conyers, but to thank Senator Boxer and the House members who had the courage to object to "Ohio" and by implication, the election and inauguration of George W. Bush. The rallies, further, would thank the hundreds of citizens who have worked tirelessly in Ohio, Florida and a number of other states to document and publicize widespread voter disenfranchisement.

Congressman Conyers' appears to be the only initiative now available that could result in convictions for Ohio voter disenfranchisment. It can be argued that there is no way to prevent further schemes for disenfranchisement without convictions for what happened in Ohio.

We recommend that you read the Conyers report, which can be found at http://www.house.gov/judiciary_democrats/, because it documents specific steps that were taken in Ohio to dismantle the franchise, particularly for black voters and also, to a lesser degree, for low-income and young voters.

In Ohio, and other key states, the challenge for Republican officials, party workers and consultants was to counteract the highly effective voter registration drives aimed at likely supporters of Democratic candidates.

The Conyers report shows that Ohio Republicans moved to meet this challenge in a number of well-conceived, systematic, illegal steps that exploited weaknesses in the state voting system, including: failure to put adequate numbers of voting machines in precincts where a high Democratic turnout was expected, particularly black precincts; manipulation of provisional ballots; voter intimidation; misinformation to voters; and manipulation of voting machines.

A particularly interesting incident, that one would think would spark FBI interest, is cited in the Conyers report:

"In Franklin County, a worker at the Holiday Inn observed a team of 25 people who called themselves the 'Texas Strike Force' using payphones to make intimidating calls to likely voters, targeting people recently in the prison system. The 'Texas Strike Force' members paid their way to Ohio, but their hotel accomodations were paid for by the Ohio Republican Party, whose headquarters is across the street. The hotel worker heard one caller threaten a likely voter with being reported to the FBI and returning to jail if he voted. Another hotel worker called the police, who came but did nothing."

It is essential that we demand justice in Ohio, and other states.

For additional information, please contact: Nick Mottern (914)806-6179, Investigate N-02.

(Cross-posted at HungryBlues.)

January 13, 2005

New Mexico Secretary Of State Gives Green Light To Counties To Clear Voting Machines

NEWS RELEASE

For immediate release: January 13, 2005
Contact: Rick Lass, NM Coordinator at 505.920.0540
Blair Bobier, Media Director at 541.929.5755

NM SECRETARY OF STATE GIVES GREEN LIGHT TO COUNTIES TO CLEAR VOTING MACHINES; COBB SAYS NM OFFICIALS ARE OBSTRUCTING JUSTICE

2004 Green Party presidential candidate David Cobb today accused New Mexico election officials of "deliberately obstructing justice" by giving counties the green light to clear electronic voting machines while a demand for a recount of New Mexico's controversial presidential vote is still pending.

New Mexico had the nation's highest percentage of under-votes for the presidential race. In addition, there are still many unanswered questions about provisional ballots, missing votes and the integrity of voting machines which don't produce a paper trail.

"The conduct of New Mexico's Governor and Secretary of State has gone from bad to worse. They have gone from showing a complete disregard for New Mexico law and for the integrity of the democratic process to deliberately obstructing justice. Clearing the electronic voting machines while a recount demand is pending will destroy critical evidence about what happened on Election Day. This is outrageous and makes you wonder what they are trying to hide," said Cobb.

The recount request by Cobb and Libertarian Party presidential candidate Michael Badnarik is now the subject of a lawsuit pending in the New Mexico Court of Appeals.

In a letter faxed today to the New Mexico Attorney General's office, an attorney representing the two presidential candidates objected to the voting machines being cleared and suggested that the Secretary of State was "shirking her responsibility to insure uniform application of the election laws" by allowing county clerks to decide on their own whether or not to clear the voting machines.

"Although, generally, voting machines can be cleared 30 days after the official certification of the vote, New Mexico law is clear that this can't happen when a recount has been initiated. With an appeal pending in the New Mexico court system, any adjustment to the machines at this time is clearly inappropriate and contrary to state law," said Lowell Finley, one of the attorneys representing the candidates.

Voting rights attorneys will file a request for a temporary restraining order tomorrow against the State Canvassing Board and county clerks seeking to prevent them from clearing voting machines.

The State Canvassing Board, consisting of the New Mexico's Governor, Secretary of State and Chief Justice, met tonight and formally rejected a proposal from Cobb and Badnarik for a partial recount of the presidential vote, which would have expedited the process, saved time and avoided any costs to taxpayers. Previously, the Secretary of State had unilaterally rejected this proposal though she lacked the authority to do so.

"New Mexico's Governor and Secretary of State are doing such a poor job of following state law that they're starting to make Ohio's Kenneth Blackwell look good by comparison," said Cobb-LaMarche Media Director Blair Bobier.

For more information about the Cobb-LaMarche campaign and its recount efforts in New Mexico and Ohio, see http://www.votecobb.org.

Call To Action: Winter Democracy Campaign

Let's Keep the Pressure On!

Welcome Congress Back with a Demand to Protect and Extend Democracy!

   Last Thursday, January 6, history was made when Representative Stephanie Tubbs Jones (D-Oh.) and Senator Barbara Boxer (D-Ca.) objected to the acceptance of the electoral college votes from Ohio because of the widespread disenfranchisement, suppression and fraud that pervaded the 2004 election. Organizing, protesting, lobbying and massive caller turnout led to their action, with support from over 30 Representatives and more than 12 Senators. And a public spotlight was shone on this critical issue.

    None of this would have happened if not for the actions of literally hundreds of thousands of people who flooded Capitol Hill with emails, calls, faxes and visits.

    We need to keep the pressure on. When Congress reconvenes to begin their work on January 24th, let's let them know all throughout the week that we are here for the long haul and urge them to:

   
-Establish a special "select committee" of the House and Senate to investigate voter disenfranchisement in 2004.
    -Move immediately to put together comprehensive pro-democracy legislation.

   
This time, we urge you to focus your primary attention on local Congresspeople with direct education and call-ins since they were not our focus in the last push.  Contact your US Senators as well.  And spread the word to others in your area to do the same. You can find out contact information for your Representatives and Senators by going to www.vote-smart.org or by calling the Capitol Hill switchboard at 202-224-3121.

    And let's keep reaching out to build a stronger and broader pro-democracy movement. Only the power of an organized and aroused people can save and expand our democracy.

    For more information go to: www.ippn.org, www.nov3.us, www.pdamerica.org, or www.votecobb.org
.

This Winter Democracy Campaign was initiated by United Progressives for Democracy, the Cobb/LaMarche campaign, Code Pink, Global Exchange, Green Party of the U.S., Independent Progressive Politics Network, No Stolen Elections!, Progressive Democrats of America, Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, Truth in Elections and United for Peace and Justice. Additional endorsers include: Action Center for Justice, Charlotte, N.C., Alliance for Democracy, American Electoral Fraud Working Group, Backbone Campaign, Beyond Voting, Carlessnesshood 101 for Healthier Air, Planet and People, Coalition Against Election Fraud, Democrats.com, Grandmothers Against the War, N.Y., N.Y., Greenwich Village Coalition for Peaceful Priorities, International Labor Communications Association, Mercer Island, Wa. Peacemakers, Mercury Coalition for Honest Elections, Denver, Co., Plan of Action in a Changing Era, San Diego, Ca., Raging Grannies of Denver, Sozadee.com, Three Pines Neighborhood Association, Grants Pass, Or.,  We Do Not Concede Coalition, WILPF/Tucson chapter. To add your group send your endorsement to ippn.diane@earthlink.net.

January 11, 2005

What To Do . . .

I got sick on Thursday night and have also been a little burned out. Now that Jan 6 has passed, and I am getting back to my regular life, I have to figure out what to do with this blog. I am certainly continuing to work on election fraud and voter disenfranchisement, but before there was No Stolen Democracy, I was covering these issues at my personal blog, Hungry Blues. I have to decide if I want to maintain (and pay for) two blogs, or if I should fold No Stolen Democracy back into Hungry Blues. I'm also thinking about keeping No Stolen Democracy up as an archive and resource center, less actively maintained than Hungry Blues. I'm catching up with some things on Hungry Blues, but will also be posting some more here reasonably soon. Thanks to all for your visits, your correspondence and for your participation in the first steps towards building a grassroots movement to repair our democracy and continue the work of the Civil Rights Movement.

January 07, 2005

Press Briefing on Challenge to Ohio Electoral Votes

(via dzika, Democratic Underground.)

Real Media
http://www.edwardsdavid.com/BushVideos/blackcaucus_0501...

Reps. Jackson and Lewis speak out during Ohio Vote Challenge

(via dzika, Democratic Underground.)

Real Media
http://www.edwardsdavid.com/BushVideos/jacksonjr_050106...

Dennis Kucinich speaks out during Ohio vote challenge

(via dzika, Democratic Underground.)

http://www.edwardsdavid.com/BushVideos/kucinich_050106-...

Press Conference Video Clip - Rep. Tubbs Jones and Sen. Boxer will contest Ohio Electoral Votes

(via dzika, Democratic Underground.)

Real Media:
http://www.edwardsdavid.com/BushVideos/Boxer_050106-01....

Heroes

    By William Rivers Pitt
    t r u t h o u t | Perspective

    Friday 07 January 2005

"I think of a hero as someone who understands the degree of responsibility that comes with his freedom." 

- Bob Dylan

    As one of the journalists privileged to be able to report on the events which culminated in Thursday’s challenge to the Ohio Electors, I have had the chance to meet and observe a whole crowd of remarkable people. They deserve to be recognized.

    David Cobb and Michael Badnarik: The presidential candidates for the Green Party and Libertarian Party deserve the lion’s share of praise and credit for the events of Thursday January 6th. Before anyone else came within a mile of pushing the pile towards some kind of national reckoning regarding the election ‘irregularities’ in Ohio, Cobb and Badnarik had their shoulders down and were throwing weight. Their lawsuits in Ohio may develop into a truly significant process, particularly if their motions to preserve evidence, examine the voting machines and depose the election players are allowed to proceed. The outcome and ultimate results of Thursday’s Electoral challenge may still be in the wind, but one thing is certain: Cobb and Badnarik forced the Democrats to do the right thing, and that makes Thursday a banner day for third parties in America.

    Jon Bonifaz and Cliff Arnebeck: These two attorneys are at the heart of the Cobb/Badnarik legal effort in Ohio. In both the Ohio state court and the Federal court, they are working to bring these challenges to a fruitful conclusion. Bonifaz and Arnebeck have also been central in elevating public awareness of the problems we endure in our election process, and worked diligently to educate members of congress about what we face.

    Bev Harris and Andy Stephenson: The two pillars of BlackBoxVoting.org, Bev and Andy basically killed themselves over the two years before the 2004 election to bring public attention to the catastrophic problems involved in ‘electronic voting.’ I have clear memories of crossing paths with Andy in Seattle, and remember being amazed that he was still on his feet. The bags under his eyes could have had ‘Samsonite’ stamped on them, but still he kept on. There has recently been a falling-out among the BlackBoxVoting crew, and I take no position whatsoever on that sad little soap opera. Whatever you may think about that, the fact remains that Bev and Andy were the first, and the best, advocates for election reform regarding these new machines.

    Rep. John Conyers and his Judiciary staff: The ranking minority member of the Judiciary Committee played a central role in orchestrating the events which culminated in Thursday’s challenge. He organized hearings in Washington and Ohio to highlight the problems with the November election, educated his fellow members, and released a watershed report on the issues that will serve as a guide for any and all future actions. Conyers and his staff got the chariot rolling up on the Hill, and everyone you saw stand up and speak Thursday in Congress were basically hitching a ride with him.

    Reverend Jesse Jackson: The motivation and energy brought to this cause by Jackson in recent weeks cannot be overstated. Reverend Jackson preached, cajoled, browbeat and pushed to make sure the challenge took place on Thursday. His presence in this struggle represents a new day, a combination of the mostly-white progressive reform movement and the African-American civil rights movement. This new coalition is going to have a lot to say and do over the coming weeks and months, and may come to be the decisive factor in the fight to make sure every vote counts, and every vote is counted.

    Tim Carpenter and Kevin Spidel: These two men, who make up the backbone of Progressive Democrats of America, came out of the Kucinich campaign. Carpenter the former deputy campaign manager and Spidel the former national field organizer used the skills and contacts they developed in that campaign to bring enormous popular attention to the problems with the 2004 election. Both men have gone without sleep for months and have spent countless hours on the road to push this issue.

    Senator Barbara Boxer: It took a good degree of courage for Senator Boxer to stand up on Thursday and vote against the certification of the Ohio Electors. In the House, Republican Representatives accused her of aiding terrorism and betraying our troops in Iraq. Though such accusations are utter balderdash, they do carry a sting. In 2000, no Senator would stand with the Congressional Black Caucus to challenge what happened in Florida. Boxer, on Thursday, removed that stain, and is to be commended.

    You the People: The greatest heroes in this process have been the ordinary Americans – the teachers and lawyers and builders and students – who took the time to write and call and fax and email members of congress in such volume that ultimately, the demand for action could not be ignored. By Thursday morning, every avenue of communication on Capitol Hill had become totally paralyzed by the amount of incoming messages from people who wanted to see something done. The other names on this list played their part, but were it not for you the people, their efforts would have come to nothing. It was an awe-inspiring performance, and was the reason why Thursday’s challenge happened.

    There is a debate taking place now as to what, if anything, happened in congress on Thursday. Some feel that the failure of any Senator to stand with Boxer obviates the whole process. Others believe Thursday was a good step forward, the opening of a national dialogue on election reform, and proof that the people can force congress to act.

    At the end of the day, however, I believe Thursday was a victory because of the people I have listed above, and because of all the other heroes I failed to name. All these horses are running together at speed, and have proven they can get things done. If you believe in the cause of election reform, be warmed by the knowledge that these men and women are out there, working for you, and their efforts have only just begun.

Jesse Jackson, Jr.'s Floor Statement During Challenge to Ohio's Electoral College Votes

January, 6, 2005

Don't be confused or misled. Today's objection is not about an election result, it's about an election system that's broken and needs fixing.

Today you're hearing the facts about voter irregularities in Ohio. In 2000 you saw a similar mess in Florida. There were serious voting problems in other states - for example, New Mexico, Nevada and Florida again.

As we try to spread democracy to Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere, it might be wise, first, to look in the mirror; to take a serious look at our own house; and to analyze our own democracy.

What's wrong with our democracy? What's wrong with our voting system? State-after-state, year-after-year, why do we keep on having these problems?

The fundamental reason is this: most Americans and many in this body will find it shocking and hard to believe, but we have these problems because Americans don't have the right to vote in their Constitution! In 2000, the U.S. Supreme Court in Bush v. Gore said in very plain language, "the INDIVIDUAL CITIZEN has no federal constitutional right to vote for electors for the President of the United States." You say, "Congressman, I'm a registered voter and every time there's an election I'm entitled to vote - and I vote. What do you mean I don't have a 'right to vote'?"

I mean as an American you don't have a citizenship right to vote. Voting in the United States is a "state right" not "citizenship right."

We keep on having these problems because our voting system is built on the constitutional foundation of "states' rights" - 50 states, 3,067 counties and 13,000 different election jurisdictions, ALL SEPARATE AND UNEQUAL.

If you're an ex-felon in Illinois you can register and vote. If you're an ex-felon in eleven states, mostly in the South, you're barred from voting for life. There are nearly 5 million ex-felons who have paid their debt to society but are prohibited from ever voting again - including 1.5 million African American males. But in Maine and Vermont you can vote even if you're in jail. Like I said, we have a "states rights" separate and unequal voting system.

You ask, "What's the difference between a citizenship right and a state right?"

The First Amendment contains individual citizenship rights that go with you from state to state (that is, they are the same wherever you are in the U.S.); and they are protected and enforced by the federal government. You have equal protection under the law by the executive, legislative and judicial branches of the federal government.

Therefore, as a result of the First Amendment, every American citizen has an individual right to free speech, freedom of assembly, and religious freedom (or to choose no religion at all), regardless of which state you're in - individual rights that are protected by the federal government. You don't have such a right when it comes to voting!

A state right is NOT an American citizenship right, but a right defined and protected by each state - and limited to that state. Therefore, when it comes to voting, each state, county and election jurisdiction is different.

One-hundred-and-eight of the 119 nations in the world that elect their public officials in some democratic manner have the right to vote in their Constitution - including the Afghan Constitution and the interim document in Iraq. The United States is one of the 11 that don't!

The Bible says if you build a house on sand, when it rains, the winds blow and the storms come it will not stand. Our voting system is built on the sand of "states' rights."

That's why every four years when the entire nation is focused on a presidential election, and the rain of politics, the winds of partisanship, and the storms of campaigning come, our democratic house cannot stand the unitary test of voting fairness - and it has come close to collapsing in 2000 and 2004.

The American people are gradually losing confidence in the credibility, fairness, effectiveness and efficiency of our voting system. We cannot export our current voting system or our form of democracy to other nations because our "separate and unequal" voting system, and our concept of an Electoral College, do not reflect the best of a representative democracy. We need to build our democracy and our voting system on a rock, the rock of adding a Voting Rights Amendment to the U.S. Constitution that applies to all states and all citizens.

We need to provide the American people with a citizenship right to vote and provide Congress with the authority to craft a unitary voting system that is inclusive of all Americans and guarantees that all votes will be counted in a complete, fair and efficient manner.

It's the only foundation upon which we can build a more perfect Union.

Every two, four or six years every member of Congress wants the people in their district or state to stand up and vote for them. Today it's time for every member of Congress to stand up and vote for the right of the people to vote, and to have their vote fairly and fully counted.

Get Stephanie Tubbs Jones Onto Oprah

Go here to suggest Stephanie Tubbs Jones as a guest on Oprah.

One of my friends in CAEF had this great idea for how to get the voice of our national hero before a large, national audience. Go do it now.

Suggested text for the suggestion box: "Please invite Stephanie Tubbs Jones onto your show to discuss her objection to certification of Ohio's Elctoral College vote."

A Letter From One of the Coalition Against Election Fraud DC Lobbyists

Dear Senator,

One Honest Man. In ancient Greece, the philosopher Diogenes went searching with a lantern to find "one honest man". It wasn't easy. I don't know if he ever succeeded. (I suspect that if he broadened his search to include women, he might have succeeded!)

For the last three days my colleagues and I from a modest group of citizens have been searching the halls of the senate office buildings for "One Courageous Senator". We carry notebooks of evidence instead of lanterns. We don't know if we will succeed.

The senators, and representatives, have a legal duty today to pass judgment on the electoral behavior of every one of the 50 states. Although there have been a few exceptions, tradition is that they accept the votes sent to them. They go through the formalities of accepting the votes, but they have the opportunity to object.

They have an opportunity to say, state-by-state, that the selection of electors was done in an acceptable way, or to say that it was not acceptable. To the extent that it is possible for independent investigators to know in the short period since the election, we know that what went on in at least several states cannot be acceptable, and we have clues that even worse things went on. These are clues that must be followed.

There are thousands of people whose names can be named and whose stories are documented who suffered attempts, successful or unsuccessful, at disenfranchisement. This is acceptable?

There are states that don't follow or even thwart their own rules for recounts, including documented cases of tampering of machines before recounts. This is acceptable?

There are documented attempts to fabricate election materials obtained under freedom of information requests, and to destroy the real material. This is acceptable?

And we have clues, many of them, that the basic process of collecting and tabulating votes may have been tampered with in favor of one candidate. These are not honest errors; they are tips of icebergs -- icebergs that we will discover either by investigation, or when our democracy hits them, and sinks.

In a few hours the House and Senate will be asked, "Is this acceptable?" Yes or no, Senator, is this acceptable?

We're looking for "One Courageous Senator" who will stand up and say, "This is wrong!" We wish we could find 100. The American people, and the generations who went before, deserve 100 courageous senators. But can we find even one?

In our conversations with Senator's aides, we see little outrage at this unacceptable electoral behavior. More seriously, we don't see any courage. It is not courageous to simply defer all questions to a future GAO report. Is the GAO the "Department of Courage"? It is not courageous to say, "we have laws and agencies to deal with that" or "the states will deal with that", especially when the questions include the behavior of state government.

And then there's the excuse of "unity". I find it incredible that any of our most powerful and respected leaders would consider a vague "unity" a more important principle than voting rights, justice, and democracy. In a democracy, "unity" without voting rights is worthless. Why would any honorable person want to claim "unity" with people who suppressed certain classes of voters? And why would anyone with a basic knowledge of history think democracy requires unity? Unity is a characteristic of dictatorships!

Washington, DC should be a grand and beautiful city. But "beauty is as beauty does". Right now Washington is a very ugly city. People have lost the right to vote, and to have that vote counted honestly, by deliberate actions; however, few want to talk about it.

A bright light has been shown on our electoral process thanks to the efforts of election observers from many organizations. Is there not even one senator who can stand up to say, about any or all of the tens of thousands of problems, "This is wrong"? Or will each senator wait for someone else, or a safer time, to say that?


Bob Fleischer
Coalition Against Election Fraud (CAEF)
http://www.caef.us
Massachusetts
United States of America

Rivers Pitt Interview With John Conyers

Interview: Rep. Conyers with Will Pitt
  t r u t h o u t | Interview

  Thursday 06 January 2005

  I was able to interview Rep. John Conyers, ranking minority member of the House Judiciary Committee, just before the Electoral hearings began.

  PITT: How are you feeling about what is happening today?

  CONYERS: We have come a mighty long way. It seems to me, as we began this adventure, to make the ballot as important as it is, and that it be counted, and that it be available to every single qualified American voter, that I had always suspected that it would be hard for the United States Senate to do, again, what they did in 2000. To close down any possibility of any debate, of any investigation, of any recount, and it turns out that my hunch was correct.

  The fact of the matter is that we have everything to gain and nothing to lose by doing this. This isn't like there is a down-side to this. It is all up, because as everybody knows, all the phones are jammed, emails are coming in, faxes. People are coming in from all over. This is a test of American democracy, just as in 1878. They passed the law to deal with the presidential election of 1877. We have to, in 2005, pass some more election reform laws to deal with what happened in 2004.

  Senator Boxer, in her press conference with Rep. Tubbs-Jones today, said that she regretted not having stood up in 2000. What do you think about that?

  I'm sure that a lot of people have done some reconsideration of their silence from four years ago. It was totally uncalled for, but it was asked for by the then-candidate, Al Gore, and they went along.

  A little while ago, there were some Republican Representatives denigrating the whole process, describing this as an attempt to overthrow the election. How do you respond to that? What do you see as being the main purpose of this event today?

  Anyone opposed to us re-examining the balloting process in the state that had the most complaints and grievances and errors of any other state, they've got to have some kind of reason. This is not to change the outcome of the results. But I hasten to add that until we complete our investigation, I don't know if it will change the result or if it won't change the result.

  But that's not what I'm after. What I'm after is understanding what things were not done properly, what things were done fraudulently, what things were done unintentionally, so that we can correct it. There is an election coming up again. We thought we had taken care of this with the Help America Vote Act. It turns out that, in many instances, the provisions of the Act were misconstructed and not really followed, particularly on provisional voting ballots. Many people who voted provisionally were disqualified for reasons that are directly in conflict with the intentions of those of us who put that into law.

  So where does this go from here?

  We, here, are asking today to have a joint House/Senate committee reconsider and review all of the investigatory work that me and the members and our staff have brought together. We want to get a commitment that we are going to come out of this looking for additional election law reforms, because there are a lot of people who don't want to do that. This brings it all into focus. It tests the will of every member in the Senate and the House as to what they stand for in these elections.

  Is there anything else you'd like to add?

  I think what the American people did and are doing, in calling and letting everybody know that they are outraged, that this has to be something that somebody would study to determine whether they want to object to the Electoral College report from Ohio, has been extraordinary, and has had a huge impact. Of course, the one person not in any government position, the Rev. Jesse Jackson, deserves tremendous praise for all he has done in coordinating so many efforts here, including right up until today.

  I think a lot of people would agree that your opening of the hearing in the beginning of December, and then later in Ohio, gave people an opportunity not only to hear the evidence and grievances, but also gave people the chance to begin moving towards doing something about it. So I think a lot of people owe you a debt of gratitude, as well.

  That's very kind of you.

New York Times Coverage

Congress Ratifies Bush Victory After a Rare Challenge.

The New York Times has a decent article on today's events. The quotations are skewed in favor of the Republicans and the sell out Democats, but the coverage is substantive.Why it wasn't front page news is hard to fathom.

January 06, 2005

Congresswoman Tubbs Jones Objects to Certification of Ohio Electoral Votes

For ImmediateRelease
January 6, 2005
CONTACT: Nicole Y. Williams
(202) 225-7032

Washington, D.C. –Today, Congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs Jones, along with Senator Barbara Boxer (CA), entered a formal objection to the certification of the State of Ohio's Electoral Votes. Her prepared floor statement, in part, was as follows:

"I, Stephanie Tubbs Jones, a representative from Ohio, and Ms. Boxer, a Senator from California, object to the counting of the electoral votes of the State of Ohio on the ground that they were not, under all of the known circumstances, regularly given.

"I, thank God, that I have a Senator joining me in this objection. I appreciate Senator Boxer's willingness to listen to the plight of hundreds and even thousands of Ohio voters that for a variety of reasons were denied the right to vote. Unfortunately objecting to the electoral votes from Ohio is the only immediate avenue to bring these issues to light.

"While some have called our cause foolish I can assure you that my parents, Mary and Andrew Tubbs did not raise any fools and as a lawyer, former judge and prosecutor, I am duty bound to follow the law and apply the law to the facts as I find them.

"It is on behalf of those millions of Americans who believe in and value our democratic process and the right to vote that I put forth this objection today. If they are willing stand at the polls for countless hours in the rain as many did in Ohio, then I can surely stand up for them here in the halls of Congress.

"This objection does not have at its root the hope or even the hint of overturning or challenging the victory of the President; but it is a necessary, timely and appropriate opportunity to review and remedy the most precious process in our democracy."

"I raise this objection neither to put the nation in the turmoil of a proposed overturned election nor to provide cannon fodder or partisan demagoguery for my fellow Republican Members of Congress.

"I raise this objection because I am convinced that we as a body must conduct a formal and legitimate debate about election irregularities. I raise this objection to debate the process and protect the integrity of the true will of the people.

"Again, I thank Senator Boxer for joining me in this objection to the counting of Ohio's electoral votes due to the considerable number of voting irregularities that transpired in my home state.

"There are serious allegations in two lawsuits pending in Ohio that debate the constitutionality of the denial of provisional ballots to voters (The Sandusky County Democratic Party v. J. Kenneth Blackwell) and Ohio's vote recount (Yost v. David Cobb, et al.). These legitimate questions brought forward by the lawsuits, which go to the core of our voting and Democratic process, should be resolved before Ohio's electoral votes are certified.

"Moreover, as you are aware, advancing legislative initiatives is more challenging when you are in the minority party in Congress. However, this challenge is multiplied when you are in the minority in the House of Representatives because of House rules, compared to Senate rules.

"Voting irregularities were an issue after the 2000 presidential election, when Democratic House initiatives relating to election reform were not considered.

"Therefore, in order to prevent our voices from being kept silent, it is imperative that we object to the counting of Ohio's electoral votes and debate the issue of Ohio's voting improprieties.

"There are just over 1 million registered voters in Cuyahoga County - which of course includes the Greater Cleveland area and the 11th Congressional District which I represent. Registration increased approximately 10 percent.

"The beauty of the 2004 election was that more people were fully prepared to exercise their right to vote - however on Election Day hundreds and even thousands of individuals went to the voting polls and were denied the opportunity to have their vote count.

"In my own county where citizen volunteers put forth a Herculean effort to register, educate, mobilize and protect the vote there were people who experienced irregularities.

"Poor and minority communities had disproportionately long waits - 4 to 5 hours waits were widespread. Election Protection Coalition testified that more than half of the complaints about long lines they received “came from Columbus and Cleveland where a huge proportion of the state’s Democratic voters live. One entire polling place in Cuyahoga County (Greater Cleveland) had to “shut down” at 9:25 a.m. on Election Day because there were no working machines.

"Cuyahoga County had an overall provisional ballot rejection rate of 32 percent. Rejection rates for provisional ballots in African American precincts/wards in Cleveland, Ohio averaged 37 percent and ranged as high as 51 percent.

"Thousands of partisan challengers - concentrated in Cuyahoga County’s minority and Democratic communities - effectively served to intimidate voters and confuse poll workers. There were both inconsistent and illegal requests for photo identification.

"There were problems with absentee ballots including incorrect information provided to voters by the Secretary of State and, consequently, the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections telling voters they could not vote in their precinct – effectively disenfranchising hundreds and more likely thousands of voters.

"This objection points out the inadequacy of a great election system which permits 50 Secretary's of State to administer a federal election and impose so many different state laws regulating the election.

"In Ohio, the Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell who served as Co-Chair of the Bush re-election campaign, issued a bizarre series of directives in the days preceding the 2004 Presidential election that created tremendous confusion among voters in Cuyahoga County and across the state of Ohio.

"For example; on September 7, 2004, Secretary Blackwell issued a directive to local boards of elections mandating rejection of voter registration forms based on their paperweight – 80lb text weight. Mr. Blackwell’s issuance of this directive – which he ultimately reversed by September 28, 2004 - resulted in serious confusion and chaos among the counties and voters.

"My objection points to the need to implement across this nation standards that apply to all states. We need to enact legislation that will:

* Allow all voters to vote early - so that obligations of employment and family will not interfere with the ability to cast a vote.
* Establish a national holiday - Election Day to bring attention to the importance of the vote.
* Require those who work in the voting booth to be fairly compensated, adequately educated and sufficiently supported such that the job importance will be elevated.
* That will provide equipment - whether it is the traditional punch card or the more modern electronic machines that are properly calibrated, fully tested for accuracy and provide a paper trial to ensure a verifiable audit of every vote.

"What happened in Ohio may well have been repeated in counties across this country. Yet that is no excuse for us to push the irregularities behind us and go on with the business of the day. These incidents are a call for us to clean up, clear up and implement policies and procedures that will protect each citizen's precious right to vote.

"If in fact we see it is our obligation to secure democracy around the world to monitor and oversee free and fair elections in other countries surely we must ensure, protect and guarantee the right to vote right here at home."

(Source.)

Let The Movement Begin

It looks like the historic actions taken by Representative Stephanie Tubbs Jones and Senator Barbara Boxer will be swept quickly under the rug and Washington will soon return to business as usual.

No one should have any illusion that if the objections had gone further today that we would have achieved the justice that we strive for. Even if Geroge W. Bush were unseated by objections to multiple sets of electors, the fight for voting rights and fair elections would still require an ongoing, energetic movement.

We've identified the issues. We've educated new allies. We've formed new relationships and networks. We've felt the power of our numbers. We have acted with great energy and unity in the name of justice and democracy.

We've started a movement.

Let's get to work.

Senator Barrbara Boxer's Letter to Representative Stephanie Tubbs Jone

U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) sent the following letter
to Representative Stephanie Tubbs Jones on January 5, 2005:


January 5, 2005


The Honorable Stephanie Tubbs Jones
1009 Longworth H.O.B.
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, D.C. 20515

Dear Representative Tubbs Jones:

I am in receipt of your letter that spelled out concerns about the election irregularities in Ohio during the November 2004 election.

The fact that you are from Ohio and that you are a former judge gives great weight and much credibility to the points you cited and to your plea that these issues be addressed by the Congress.

I was particularly moved by your point that it is virtually impossible to get official House consideration of the whole issue of election reform, including these irregularities.

I have concluded that objecting to the electoral votes from Ohio is the only immediate way to bring these issues to light by allowing you to have a two-hour debate to let the American people know the facts surrounding Ohio’s election.

I will therefore join you in your objection to the certification of Ohio’s electoral votes. Attached is my signature on a copy of your written objection.

Sincerely,

Barbara Boxer
United States Senator

Statement by U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer on Her Objection to the Certification of Ohio’s Electoral Votes

For Immediate Release:
January 6, 2004

For most of us in the Senate and the House, we have spent our lives fighting for things we believe in – always fighting to make our nation better.

We have fought for social justice. We have fought for economic justice. We have fought for environmental justice. We have fought for criminal justice.

Now we must add a new fight – the fight for electoral justice.

Every citizen of this country who is registered to vote should be guaranteed that their vote matters, that their vote is counted, and that in the voting booth of their community, their vote has as much weight as the vote of any Senator, any Congressperson, any President, any cabinet member, or any CEO of any Fortune 500 Corporation.

I am sure that every one of my colleagues – Democrat, Republican, and Independent – agrees with that statement. That in the voting booth, every one is equal.

So now it seems to me that under the Constitution of the United States, which guarantees the right to vote, we must ask:

Why did voters in Ohio wait hours in the rain to vote? Why were voters at Kenyan College, for example, made to wait in line until nearly 4 a.m. to vote because there were only two machines for 1300 voters?

Why did poor and predominantly African-American communities have disproportionately long waits?

Why in Franklin County did election officials only use 2,798 machines when they said they needed 5,000? Why did they hold back 68 machines in warehouses? Why were 42 of those machines in predominantly African-American districts?

Why did, in Columbus area alone, an estimated 5,000 to 10,000 voters leave polling places, out of frustration, without having voted? How many more never bothered to vote after they heard about this?

Why is it when 638 people voted at a precinct in Franklin County, a voting machine awarded 4,258 extra votes to George Bush. Thankfully, they fixed it – but how many other votes did the computers get wrong?

Why did Franklin County officials reduce the number of electronic voting machines in downtown precincts, while adding them in the suburbs? This also led to long lines.

In Cleveland, why were there thousands of provisional ballots disqualified after poll workers gave faulty instructions to voters?

Because of this, and voting irregularities in so many other places, I am joining with Congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs Jones to cast the light of truth on a flawed system which must be fixed now.

Our democracy is the centerpiece of who we are as a nation. And it is the fondest hope of all Americans that we can help bring democracy to every corner of the world.

As we try to do that, and as we are shedding the blood of our military to this end, we must realize that we lose so much credibility when our own electoral system needs so much improvement.

Yet, in the past four years, this Congress has not done everything it should to give confidence to all of our people their votes matter.


After passing the Help America Vote Act, nothing more was done.
A year ago, Senators Graham, Clinton and I introduced legislation that would have required that electronic voting systems provide a paper record to verify a vote. That paper trail would be stored in a secure ballot box and invaluable in case of a recount.

There is no reason why the Senate should not have taken up and passed that bill. At the very least, a hearing should have been held. But it never happened.

Before I close, I want to thank my colleague from the House, Congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs Jones.

Her letter to me asking for my intervention was substantive and compelling.

As I wrote to her, I was particularly moved by her point that it is virtually impossible to get official House consideration of the whole issue of election reform, including these irregularities.

The Congresswoman has tremendous respect in her state of Ohio, which is at the center of this fight.

Congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs Jones was a judge for 10 years. She was a prosecutor for 8 years. She was inducted into the Women’s Hall of Fame in 2002.

I am proud to stand with her in filing this objection.

###

Today I Am Proud To Be An American

Thank you, dear fellow citizens.

We, The People have made this happen.

More News From Rivers Pitt: Clinton, Obama and Dodd to Support Boxer Challenge

William Rivers Pit, always scrupulous about his information says this:

Right now, several other Senators are preparing statements of Support for the Boxer/Tubbs-Jones challenge, and a number of House members will also rise in support. There is every expectation that Senators Clinton, Obama and Dodd will be among those offering statements of support.

Reps. Waters, Conyers and Kucinich will be among the House members who stand. Though Rep. Conyers was the main impetus behind this process, it was decided that Rep. Tubbs-Jones should be the one to make the official challenge, as she is a representative from Ohio, where the dispute is centered.

There is a rumor floating around that one of the Senators to rise in support will be a Republican. That is not in any way confirmed.

KEEP THE CALLS COMING! THE MORE SENATORS SUPPORTING, THE MORE EFFECT YOUR CALLS CAN HAVE ON OTHERS—ESPECIALLY HARRY REID.

Don't Stop Calling

More Senators are expected to object, but we need to keep calling Harry Reid and tell him to not discourage other Senators from objecting. Tell him you want more Senators to object.

Also keep calling all the Senators up for re-election in 2006.

Boxer Will Object

Barabara Boxer Takes A Stand For Democracy

I just spoke with Sheila Parks from the Coalition Against Election Fraud. When she and other CAEF members walked into Senator Boxer's office this morning, the staff members handed them a statement from Boxer that she will object.

The news is also just out on the AP. From Boxers Statment:

"I have concluded that objecting to the electoral votes from Ohio is the only immediate way to bring these issues to light by allowing you to have a two-hour debate to let the American people know the facts surrounding Ohio's election," Boxer wrote in a letter to Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones, D-Ohio, a leader of the Democratic effort.

New Word Out of Conyers Office

Late last night the Coalition Against Election Fraud DC Lobbyists heard from the office of John Conyers that calls are now urgently needed to

Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV)
202/224/3542 (office)
800/839-5276 (switchboard)
877/762-8762 (switchboard)
Call Reed and tell him we want a Senator to object.

USE ALL FORMS OF COMMUNICATION: CALL, FAX, EMAIL

The point is that Reed should give other Senators the go ahead to object if they want to.

IMPORTANT: KEEP CALLING UNTIL THE END OF THE DAY. DON'T STOP AT 1:00 PM.

More From the DC Lobbyists:
CALL SENATORS UP FOR 2006 RE-ELECTION

CALL EMAIL FAX THE SENATORS UP FOR RE-ELECTION IN 2006.

LET THEM KNOW THAT IF NO SENATORS STAND UP TO OBJECT WE WILL NOT VOTE FOR THE ONES WHO ARE UP FOR RE-ELECTION.

The Senators up for re-election in 2006 are:

Akaka, Daniel (D) Hawaii

Bingaman, Jeff (D) New Mexico

Byrd, Robert (D) West Virginia

Cantwell, Maria (D) Washington

Carper, Thomas (D) Delaware

Carper, Thomas (D) Delaware

Clinton, Hillary (D) New York

Conrad, Kent (D) North Dakota

Corzine, Jon (D) New Jersey

Dayton, Mark (D) Minnesota

Feinstein, Diane (D) California

Jeffords, Jim (I) Vermont

Kennedy, Edward (D) Massachusetts

Kohl, Herb (D) Wisconsin

Lieberman, Joe (D) Connecticut

Nelson, Ben (D) Nebraska

Nelson, Bill (D)Florida

Sarbanes, Paul (D) Maryland

Stabenow, Debbie (D) Michigan

IMPORTANT: KEEP CALLING UNTIL THE END OF THE DAY. DON'T STOP AT 1:00 PM.

New Word Out of Conyers Office

Late last night the Coalition Against Election Fraud DC Lobbyists heard from the office of John Conyers that calls are now urgently needed to

Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV)

Call Reed and tell him we want a Senator to object.

USE ALL FORMS OF COMMUNICATION: CALL, FAX, EMAIL

The point is that Reed should give other Senators the go ahead to object if they want to.

IMPORTANT: KEEP CALLING UNTIL THE END OF THE DAY. DON'T STOP AT 1:00 PM.

From The Coalition Against Election Fraud DC Lobbyists:
CALLS URGENTLY NEEDED

Eleven members of Coalition Against Election Fraud have been lobbying Senators since Tuesday. Based on their meetings with Senators and aides and on what they're hearing around the Hill, they've put out this request:

Call the offices of these senators:

First, Sen. Barbara Boxer, CA (D) and Sen. Feingold, Wisconsin (D);
then these senators:
Sen. Bill Nelson, Florida (D);
Sen. Joe Biden, Delaware(D);
Sen. Dianne Feinstein, California (D);
Sen. Robert Byrd, West Virginia (D);
Sen. Carl Levin, Michigan (D);
Sen. Mark Dayton, Minnesota (D).
The capitol switchboard numbers are:
1/800/839-5276
1/877/762-8762
The switchboard is open all night, seven days a week. Maybe some of the senators' voice mailboxes will still be open.

From art3: My experience calling all 45 senators-what they say

art 3 has this post at Democratic Underground:

here is what I did today, like you:
all day I called every single democratic senator, plus jeffords, chaffee. Im compeltely exhausted. the senators are inundated, make no doubt guys. one girl I spoke with was at the point of tears, thousands of phone calls. I asked the operator: So a high call volume today? she said tens of thousands are calling, all about ohio. good. phone lines are jammed-literally. could never get to feingold. finally got to boxer's san diego office. the only office of her's that had a open phone line! holey hell.
--my oberservations: either the staffs of these senators have been told to play coy on tommorrow's events,or they are bullshiting on the phone, or they are really pset by conyers' report and are thinking of contesting the vote.
--whose offices were most helpful: byrd, schumer, clinton. hands down.
clinton's staffer told me -hillary has a group of lawyers who are examining the issue and is deciding what action she will or will not take tommorrow on the senate floor. also he said these lawyers have been to ohio verifying information.
*schumer's staffer told me-we are flooded. thousands of calls. a real flood on ohio. said call kerry. I did-kerry's dc office says" mailbox full, sorry." has he already left the nation?
*byrd's office was especially receptive. said all the senators have conyers' report and reguard it with great seriousness.
*sen. landrieau's office: really receptive. I mentioned msnbc reported boxer may challenge. they said that changes everything. whatever that means.
*kennedy's office-snide, but then the staffer said "we are overwhelmed beyond belief. we are physically and meotionally exhausted from the calls. expressed great concern. said kennedy is deciding what action to take.
the others had nothing really distinctive, but almost all would say "let me guess, ohio right?" yes, that is how many calls.
--I just wanted my voice to be added to the tally the staffs keep on issues. clearly today's tally is exclusively in favor of contesting the vote. Im amazed that so many people are calling. the internet movement has moved to the senate and house. to all of us who have fought so hard-called, faxed letters may we find our efforts proven fruitful. if not, I will be devastated. we have done all can today, I think.
--My main worry now-if there really is a challenge, will msm interupt programming and cover the multi-hour event live. nothing like this has happened in over 100 years. oh my sore body prays.
**Also- watched cbs evening news. nothing. ahhhhh. should I e-blast the media again, this time to cover tommorrow? whew and ugh...
thanks
art

Update on Calls

A reader has written in to report the following:

You might be interested (or perhaps already know) that the voice mail boxes for the listed Senators are all FULL. I tried each, then gave up and tried Senator Harry (my senator) on the off chance that his mail box wasn't full since he wasn't on your list. Though I have previously written him a couple of times about the election, I left a message there for him tonight. Do you want to augment your list with the names of other Democratic Senators? That might drive up more calls actually being counted tonight. Thanks.
Yes, call others in the meantime, and then from the moment they open the starting gates in the morning, call and call and call and call and call and call the list until we fry the phone lines.

UPDATE:Ah, why didn't I think of that: the DUers are sending faxes and email till the phones open up again in the morning. Of course you can also try the local office numbers in the Senators' home states. The general protocol is that calsl are tallied and sent back to Washington.

From The Coalition Against Election Fraud DC Lobbyists:
CALLS URGENTLY NEEDED

Eleven members of Coalition Against Election Fraud have been lobbying Senators since Tuesday. Based on their meetings with Senators and aides and on what they're hearing around the Hill, they've put out this request:

Call the offices of these senators:

First, Sen. Barbara Boxer, CA (D) and Sen. Feingold, Wisconsin (D);
then these senators:
Sen. Bill Nelson, Forida (D);
Sen. Joe Biden, Delaware(D);
Sen. Dianne Feinstein, California (D);
Sen. Robert Byrd, West Virginia (D); and
Sen. Carl Levin, Michigan (D).
The capitol switchboard numbers are:
1/800/839-5276
1/877/762-8762
The switchboard is open all night, seven days a week. Maybe some of the senators' voice mailboxes will still be open.

January 05, 2005

January 6, 2005 -- Washington, DC, In front of FBI Headquarters -- 9:00 A.M. -- Rally & Vigil Calling for Investigation

IMPORTANT! (see note below)

 
RALLY AND VIGIL TO BE HELD AT FBI HEADQUARTERS
IN WASHINGTON, DC, 9 AM, JAN. 6TH
                                                        

We would appreciate it if you would spread the word as widely as possible that, prior to the 10 AM rally at Lafayette Park, a rally and vigil will be held Thursday, Nov. 6 at 9 AM at the headquarters of the FBI, 935 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC, at Pennsylvania Avenue entrance, calling for an intensive investigation of vote rigging and vote suppression in Ohio,Florida and other states.

The rally is being organized by people from White Plains, NY, who have held nine rallies and vigils since Dec. 3 at the White Plains office of the FBI. So far they have received no response to letters they have sent to the FBI.

We will march from this vigil to the 10 AM rally at Lafayette Park.

For information, contact Nick Mottern (914) 806-6179.

 

(Via Ohio Election Fraud)      


This particular protest is the other front of our struggle to protect voting rights. For a primer on what is at stake, please read Jefferey Toobin's Poll Position. Also see this and this at my other blog. --BG

Conyers Report: What Went Wrong in Ohio

  Preserving Democracy:
  What Went Wrong in Ohio
  Status Report of the House Judiciary Committee Democratic Staff

  Wednesday 05 January 2005

  Executive Summary

  Representative John Conyers, Jr., the Ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, asked the Democratic staff to conduct an investigation into irregularities reported in the Ohio presidential election and to prepare a Status Report concerning the same prior to the Joint Meeting of Congress scheduled for January 6, 2005, to receive and consider the votes of the electoral college for president. The following Report includes a brief chronology of the events; summarizes the relevant background law; provides detailed findings (including factual findings and legal analysis); and describes various recommendations for acting on this Report going forward.

  We have found numerous, serious election irregularities in the Ohio presidential election, which resulted in a significant disenfranchisement of voters. Cumulatively, these irregularities, which affected hundreds of thousand of votes and voters in Ohio, raise grave doubts regarding whether it can be said the Ohio electors selected on December 13, 2004, were chosen in a manner that conforms to Ohio law, let alone federal requirements and constitutional standards.

  This report, therefore, makes three recommendations: (1) consistent with the requirements of the United States Constitution concerning the counting of electoral votes by Congress and Federal law implementing these requirements, there are ample grounds for challenging the electors from the State of Ohio; (2) Congress should engage in further hearings into the widespread irregularities reported in Ohio; we believe the problems are serious enough to warrant the appointment of a joint select Committee of the House and Senate to investigate and report back to the Members; and (3) Congress needs to enact election reform to restore our people's trust in our democracy. These changes should include putting in place more specific federal protections for federal elections, particularly in the areas of audit capability for electronic voting machines and casting and counting of provisional ballots, as well as other needed changes to federal and state election laws.

  With regards to our factual finding, in brief, we find that there were massive and unprecedented voter irregularities and anomalies in Ohio. In many cases these irregularities were caused by intentional misconduct and illegal behavior, much of it involving Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell, the co-chair of the Bush-Cheney campaign in Ohio.

  First, in the run up to election day, the following actions by Mr. Blackwell, the Republican Party and election officials disenfranchised hundreds of thousands of Ohio citizens, predominantly minority and Democratic voters:

  • The misallocation of voting machines led to unprecedented long lines that disenfranchised scores, if not hundreds of thousands, of predominantly minority and Democratic voters. This was illustrated by the fact that the Washington Post reported that in Franklin County, "27 of the 30 wards with the most machines per registered voter showed majorities for Bush. At the other end of the spectrum, six of the seven wards with the fewest machines delivered large margins for Kerry." (See Powell and Slevin, supra). Among other things, the conscious failure to provide sufficient voting machinery violates the Ohio Revised Code which requires the Boards of Elections to "provide adequate facilities at each polling place for conducting the election."
  • Mr. Blackwell's decision to restrict provisional ballots resulte