None dare call it voter suppression and fraud
November 7, 2004 By Bob Fitrakis
Columbus
Free Press (Ohio)
Evidence is mounting that the 2004 presidential election was stolen
in Ohio. Emerging revelations of voting irregularities coupled with
well-documented Republican efforts at voter suppression prior to
the election suggests that in a fair election Kerry would have won
Ohio.
Democratic hopeful Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts conceded
on November 3, based on preliminary postings by the highly partisan
Republican Ohio Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell. These unofficial
results showed Bush with 136,483 more votes than Kerry, although
155,428 provisional ballots, 92,672 "spoiled" ballots,
additional overseas ballots, and some remaining absentee ballots
remained uncounted.
The day after his concession, Kerry drew 3,893 votes closer to Bush
when a computerized voting machine "glitch" was discovered
in an Ohio precinct. A machine in ward 1B in the predominantly Republican
Gahanna, Ohio, recorded 4,258 votes for George W. Bush when only
638 people cast votes at the New Life Church polling site. Buried
on page A6 of the Columbus Dispatch, the story also reported that
the voting machine recorded 0 votes in a race between Franklin County
Commissioners Arlene Shoemaker and Paula Brooks. Franklin County
Board of Elections Director Matt Damschroder told the Dispatch that
the voting machine glitches were "why the results on election
night are unofficial."
The right-wing New Life Church voting glitch is interesting. Free
Press reporter Marley Greiner has been tracking Blackwell's relationship
with far right-wing religious forces like Biblical America and Christian
dominionist groups that want to establish theocratic religious rule
in America. Blackwell was campaigning around the state with the Reverend
Rod Parsley as part of a "Silent No More" tour in support
of amending the Ohio Constitution to outlaw gay marriage, on the
ballot as Issue One. Many mainstream commentators claim it was the
widely popular Issue One amendment campaign that brought out Bush
voters in record numbers in rural Ohio. Gay marriage was already
outlawed by state statute, and six of the seven Ohio Supreme Court
justices are Republicans.
The nonpartisan Citizen's Alliance for Secure Elections (CASE) is
investigating various other voting irregularities in Ohio, among
them:
- In Auglaize County, a letter dated October 21 under the signature
of Ken Nuss, the county's former deputy director, alleges that
Joe McGinnis, a former employee of Election Systems & Software
(ES&S), violated election protocol with his unauthorized
use of the county's central tabulating computer that creates
ballots
and compiles election results. Nuss, who resigned on October
21, alleges that McGinnis was improperly granted access to the
computer
the weekend of October 16.
- In Miami County, with 100% of the precincts reporting at 9am
EST Wednesday, Nov. 3, Bush had 20,807 votes (65.80%) and Kerry
had 10,724 (33.92%). Miami reported 31,620 voters. Inexplicably,
nearly
19,000 new ballots were added after all precincts reported, boosting
Bush's vote to 33,039 (65.77%) to Kerry's 17,039 (33.92%). CASE
is investigating why the percentage of the vote stayed exactly
the same
to three one-hundredths of a percentage point after nearly 19,000
new ballots were added. CASE members speculate that it's either
a long-shot coincidence with the last three digits remaining the
same,
or that someone had pre-set a database and programmed a voting
machine to cough up a pre-set percentage of votes. Miami County
uses an easily
hackable optical scanner with the central counter provided by
the Republican-linked vendor ES&S.
- In Warren County, administrators and election officials locked
down the county administrative building and prohibited all independent
election observers from watching the vote count. County officials
cited "homeland security," according to the Cincinnati
Enquirer. WCPO-TV Channel 9 News Director Bob Morford told the Enquirer
that he had "never seen anything like it." Morford asserted
that throwing the media and independent observers out of the centralized
counting area under the guise of "homeland security" was
a "red herring." He said, "That's something to put
up when you don't know what else to put up to keep us out." In
Warren County, Bush picked up an additional 12,000 votes over
his 2000 election total.
- In Franklin County, where Franklin County Board of Elections
Director Matt Damschroder is also the former Executive Director
of the county's Republican Party, the county Board of Elections
building
looked like a bunker. Scores of city buses blocked parking spaces
on the street outside, numerous concrete barricades surrounded
the parking lot, and a metal detector was stationed at the only
entrance.
A phalanx of armed deputy sheriffs swarmed the only site where
provisional voters could cast a guaranteed ballot. The Columbus
Dispatch confirmed
an Election Day Free Press story that far fewer voting machines
were present in predominantly black Democratic inner-city voting
wards
than in the recent primary election and the 2000 presidential
election, with their lighter turnouts. The reduced number of machines
caused
voters to wait up to seven hours and wait an average of approximately
three hours. One Republican Central Committee member told the
Free Press that Damschroder held back as many as 2000 machines
and dispersed
many of the other machines to affluent suburbs in Franklin County.
- In rural Drake County, Kerry received 78 less votes than Al
Gore in 2000, but Bush received 3000 more votes. Drake is the
only county in Miami Valley where Kerry's votes was less than Gore's
and
where Bush's vote rose dramatically.
Prior to the discovery of these irregularities, investigative
reporter Greg Palast, who exposed the systematic disenfranchisement
of Democratic
voters in Florida in 2004, wrote an article entitled, "Kerry
won." Palast and numerous other observers point to the fact
that the exit polls showed Kerry winning. Palast concludes that
the exit polls were correct, but Kerry votes were far more likely
to
remain uncounted on election night.
Unofficial Ohio presidential results provided by the Secretary of
State's Office show 155,428 provisional ballots cast. Blackwell was
all over the national news telling everyone who would listen that
these ballots were randomly distributed and not disproportionately
for Kerry. As former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani raved on national
TV demanding Kerry's concession, a basic analysis of the provisional
ballots suggested that they were disproportionately for Kerry.
Historically, provisional ballots are far more likely to be cast
by poor and minority voters, who live in the urban centers and move
more often. Ohio has 88 counties, the vast majority of them rural.
Kerry won 15 counties in Ohio, virtually all large urban centers.
In those counties, 85,096 provisional ballots remain uncounted. Past
elections point to the fact that these provisional ballots are hardly
ever cast in the affluent, primarily Republican municipalities, but
are overwhelmingly from the central city. Also, an additional 17,038
provisional ballots are from Hamilton County and Wood County. Bush
won Hamilton with 53% of the vote and Wood County with 53.5%. Traditionally,
the provisional ballots in Hamilton County come from Cincinnati and
its poor central city areas. These are areas where John Kerry won
handily on Election Day.
Thus, 102,134 of the provisional ballots, nearly two-thirds (65.7%)
in all probability come from solidly pro-Kerry areas and are most
likely cast by pro-Kerry supporters such as African Americans and
the poor. These fit the same socio-economic demographics and racial
profiles of voters targeted by the GOP for challenges in Ohio.
Palast also points to the 92,672 so-called "spoiled" ballots
in Ohio that have yet to be counted, and may never be tallied. The
most famous spoiled ballots were the 2004 Florida punch cards that
could not be machine read, but when looked at manually the voter's
intent could be determined. Expert statisticians who investigated
spoilage in the 2000 election in Florida found that 54% of these
discarded ballots were cast by blacks. In Ohio, most of the spoiled
votes were lost through punch card ballots in 2004.
By Blackwell directing county Boards of Elections not to count the
provisional ballots for 11 days, it benefited the Bush campaign since
an immediate counting would have no doubt made the race tigher between
Kerry and Bush, and perhaps prompted Kerry to request a recount.
This would have the 92,672 discarded "spoiled" ballots
that were also likely to favor Kerry.
Daniel Tokaji, Professor of Law at the Ohio State University College
of Law commented: "One other point. Ohio Secretary of State
Ken Blackwell has reportedly said that provisional ballots won't
be counted for 11 days. I'm not sure where he's getting this, but
he may be relying on ORC 3505.32. This statute provides that the
boards of election are to begin canvassing election returns between
11 and 15 days after the election and 'continue the canvass daily
until it is completed.' Perhaps I'm missing something, but I don't
see how this precludes provisional votes from being counted earlier
than that, even if the canvass doesn't begin until the 11th day."
Spoiled ballots will only be counted if someone with standing, such
as five Kerry electors or the Ohio Democratic Party, demands and
legally qualifies for a recount. Thus, the exit polls may have been
correct. A majority of people voted for Kerry in Ohio; but 250,000
votes were not counted, most favoring Kerry over Bush. If Kerry had
won by even one vote in Ohio, he would be the next President of the
United States.
Irregularities in other key battleground states have prompted three
U.S. representatives to urgently request that the Comptroller General
of the United States David Walker and the General Accounting Office "immediately
undertake an investigation of the efficiency of voting machines and
new technologies used in the 2004 election." Tom Hartmann, in
his post election article on CommonDreams.org ("Evidence mounts
that the vote was hacked"), reminds readers that Bev Harris,
who started blackboxvoting.org, showed Howard Dean how to hack a
county "central tabulator" computer in 90 seconds live
on CNBC.
The Diebold Corporation, which helped count the Ohio vote with e-voting
machines and optical scan machines, is run by a notoriously pro-Republican
CEO, Wally O'Dell. Last year O'Dell wrote a letter to Ohio Republican
donors telling them that he is "committed to helping Ohio deliver
its electoral votes to the President next year." O'Dell is a
proud member of Bush's Pioneer and Ranger team of major donors who
visit the Crawford ranch. The other major election vote counting
firm is ES&S, which is being investigated for allegedly having
a machine that subtracted votes when the totals surpassed 32,000.
On Election Day, the Election Protection Coalition observers who
covered 58 polling places in central Ohio, documented thousands of
voter complaints over long lines and recorded numerous people leaving
the polls for work or because they were elderly or handicapped and
physically unable to wait for hours to vote. Professor James K. Galbraith,
of the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University
of Texas, Austin, wrote the following summary of Election Day in
Ohio: ". . . I drove a young African-American voter, a charming
business student, seven months pregnant, to her polling place at
Finland Elementary School in south Columbus. We arrived in a squalling
rain to find voters lined up outside for about a hundred yards. .
. . The real problem was a grotesque shortage of voting machines."
Ohio State University Law Professor Edward B. Foley told the New
York Times, "When your lines get to two or three hours, it's
system failure."
Other bizarre tactics emerged in the run-up to the election:
- Under
an archaic Ohio law, both the Republican and Democratic Parties,
or any slate of five candidates, may embed official
election challengers inside polling places. The New York
Times reported
on Oct. 23 that the Republican Party intended to place thousands
of lawyers and other GOP faithfuls inside the polls to challenge
voters. Republican insiders confide here that the key goal
was to jam lines and frustrate new voters. After two federal judges
rejected the GOP challengers, Republicans got a favorable
ruling from the Sixth Circuit, which allowed them to place challengers
in Ohio polling places. Michael Beaver, Deputy State Commander
with the Election Protection Coalition says, "We now
believe that the challengers were a smokescreen to hide the
real plan
to orchestrate a machine shortage in Democratic wards."
- The Republican Party sent letters challenging thousands of
Franklin County registered voters who requested absentee ballots.
Franklin
County is home to Columbus, the state's largest city and its
capitol. Though it is also home to Ohio State University, thousands
of local
students go to schools outside the county or state. The GOP targeted
young voters for challenges. The GOP pre-challenged an estimated
35,000 voters and rented arenas in Cleveland and Columbus to
conduct the challenges. The GOP sent registered letters to registered
voters'
addresses and when they failed to pick up a letter from the Republican
Party in primarily Democratic areas, they were challenged for
fraud. A federal judge disallowed the challenges less than a week
before
the election.
- The Franklin County Board of Elections has called or written
an undetermined number of voters who obtained absentee ballots,
challenging their addresses. In at least one case, after a series
of angry phone
calls, the Board admitted there was nothing wrong with the address
in question and re-instated voting rights. The voter in question
was a registered Democrat. His wife, an independent at the same
address, was not challenged. It is unclear how many others have
been wrongly
knocked out.
- Even if they are counted, Franklin County's absentee ballot
forms are designed in ways strikingly reminiscent of those notorious
butterfly ballots in the Florida 2000 presidential election.
On Franklin County absentee ballot forms, Kerry is the third name
on the list
of presidential candidates on the left side of the ballot. But,
the punch card is designed to fit in the middle, so the actual
number
you punch for Kerry is hole "4." If you mistakenly punch
hole "3" you've just voted for Bush.
- Damschroder, Franklin County's right-wing Elections Director
is insisting on e-voting machines that have malfunctioned in
at least two Congressional elections. The machines have no paper
trail and
one subtracted 3% from former Rep. John Kasich's and added 3%
to Ed Brown, a six-point shift. The November issues of Popular
Science
and Popular Mechanics Magazines ran the following headlines on
their covers, respectively: "E-vote emergency: And you thought dimpled
chads were bad'" and "Could hackers tilt the election?" Vigorous
protests against the paperless machines have been staged here,
but many will be used, rendering a meaningful recount impossible.
- Twenty GOP-dominated Ohio counties have given wrong information
to former felons about their voter eligibility. In Hamilton County,
home of Cincinnati and the Republican Taft family, officials
told numerous former felons that a judge had to sign off before
they could
vote, which is blatantly false.
- Franklin County, which normally cancels 2-300 registered
voters a year for felony convictions, has sent at least 3,500 cancellation
letters to both current felons and ex-felons whose convictions
date
back to 1998. The list includes numerous citizens who were charged
with felonies but convicted only of misdemeanors.
- Republican Secretary of State Blackwell reversed a long-standing
Ohio practice and is barring voters from casting provisional
ballots within their county if they are registered to vote but
there's been
a mistake about where they are expected to cast their ballot.
In this year's spring primaries, Blackwell allowed voters to cast
provisional
ballots by county, even if they were in the wrong precinct. But
this fall, voters had to leave if they were in the wrong precinct
and
find their way to the right one even though they had waited in
line two to three hours. Blackwell hopes to succeed Republican
Bob Taft
as governor, and has labored hard to install Diebold e-voting
machines with no paper trail throughout Ohio. Blackwell is being
widely compared
to the infamous Katherine Harris, who handed Florida to George
W. Bush in 2000 and was rewarded with a safe Congressional seat.
Representative
Stephanie Tubbs Jones accused Blackwell of seeking "to disenfranchise
the people of the state of Ohio." Tubbs Jones pointed out
that the 2000 census had caused massive redistricting, particularly
within
inner city precincts, which would lead to many people ending
up at the wrong voting site.
- The October 22 Columbus Dispatch, which endorsed Bush, and
WVKO Radio have both documented phone calls from people impersonating
Franklin County Board of Elections workers and directing registered
voters to different and incorrect polling sites. One individual
was
falsely told not to vote at the polling station across the street
from his house, but at a "new" site, four miles away.
Under Blackwell's new rules, such a vote would not be counted.
Nor do the
precinct locations make much sense in the inner city. Someone
living on the northwest corner of Bryden and Wilson, instead
of walking
half a block to the polling site at Franklin Alternative School,
must vote seven blocks northeast at the Model Neighborhood facility
polling site. The previous polling site for the precinct was
two blocks west before the Republicans consolidated several inner
city
polling places in the 1990s.
- In Cincinnati, some 105,000 voters were moved from active
to inactive status within the last four years for not voting in
the
last two federal elections. This is not required under Ohio law,
but is an option allowed and exercised by the Republican-dominated
Hamilton County Board of Elections.
- Secretary of State Blackwell ruled that any voter registration
form on other than 80-pound weight bond paper would not be accepted.
This is an old law left over from pre-scanning days. Many voters
who had registered on lighter paper, had their registration returned,
even though the forms had been officially sanctioned by local
election boards.
- On Election Day, fliers littered the inner city telling voters
that Republicans were to vote on Tuesday and Democrats on Wednesday.
No Republican has ever won the presidency without carrying Ohio.
The voting irregularities suggest that Bush is the first Republican
President to win the presidency without winning the actual Ohio vote.
Kerry won the vote in Ohio. The exit polls are correct. The mainstream
media, instead of investigating the massive irregularities, are busy
concocting theories as to how all the exit polls, the safeguards
for fair elections, were all wrong on election night in the Buckeye
State. None dare suggest voter suppression and fraud.
-- Bob Fitrakis is a Professor in the Social and Behavioral
Sciences Department at Columbus State Community College. He has
a Ph.D in
Political Science and a J.D. from The Ohio State University Law School.
He is the author of seven books, an investigative reporter, and Editor
of the Columbus Free Press (freepress.org). He has won ten major
investigative journalism awards including Best Coverage of Politics
in Ohio from the Ohio Society of Professional Journalists. He served
as an international election observer in the 1994 presidential elections
in El Salvador and was the co-author and editor of the report to
the United Nations. He served as legal advisor for eight polling
locations on Columbus' Near East Side for the Election Protection
Coalition.
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