Home

   Archive


   Links


   Contact Us


   Webmaster


 
 
Florida Lawmaker Says 2000 Election 'Stolen' July 15, 2004
by Alan Fram

 

Washington- AP- Think the passions from the 2000 presidential election have cooled? Certainly not in the House, which voted Thursday to strike a Florida representative's words from the record after she said Republicans "stole" that closely fought contest.

The verbal battle broke out after Rep. Steve Buyer, R-Ind., proposed a measure barring any federal official from requesting that the United Nations formally observe the U.S. elections on Nov. 2.

Rep. Corrine Brown, D-Fla., and several other House Democrats have made that suggestion. They argue that some black voters were disenfranchised in 2000 and problems could occur again this fall.

"We welcome America to observe the integrity of our electoral process and we do not ask, though, for the United Nations to come as monitors at our polling stations," Buyer said.

"I come from Florida, where you and others participated in what I call the United States coup d'etat. We need to make sure it doesn't happen again," Brown said. "Over and over again after the election when you stole the election, you came back here and said, 'Get over it.' No, we're not going to get over it. And we want verification from the world."

At that point, Buyer demanded that Brown's words be "taken down," or removed the debate's permanent record.

The House's presiding officer, Rep. Mac Thornberry, R-Texas, ruled that Brown's words violated a House rule.

"Members should not accuse other members of committing a crime such as, quote, stealing, end quote, an election," Thornberry said.

When Brown objected to his ruling, the House voted 219-187 to strike her words.

Civil Rights Board Wants Inquiry on Florida Voter-Purge List
by Ford Fessenden
New York Times
:July 16, 2004

WASHINGTON, July 15 - Members of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights called on the Justice Department on Thursday to investigate possible voting-rights violations in Florida's troubled effort to purge felons from its voter registration lists.

At a hearing on the state's effort to use a list of 48,000 suspected felons to trim voter rolls, the civil rights commission's chairman, Mary Frances Berry, also urged the newly created federal Election Assistance Commission, which is distributing millions of dollars to the states for voting improvements, to consider withholding Florida's share.

The civil rights commission, which has no power to take action itself, has been deeply critical of Florida since the 2000 election. The hearing on Thursday, part of a series the commission is holding to dramatize voting problems before the 2004 election, focused on the Florida purge. Dr. Berry said she would ask the Justice Department to investigate the possibility that the purge violated the Voting Rights Act, which prohibits discrimination against minorities.

On Saturday, the Florida secretary of state, Glenda Hood, suspended the state's felon effort, citing a methodological flaw that virtually guaranteed that voters who registered as Hispanics would not be purged, while thousands of blacks might be.

Jenny Nash, a spokeswoman for Ms. Hood, said the secretary of state would audit the process of developing the felon matching list to answer questions about why the flaw was not caught earlier. Ms. Nash also said that the state's effort did not violate the Voting Rights Act, but that the state would cooperate in any Justice Department investigation.

Ms. Hood declined an invitation to appear at Thursday's hearing, but sent a letter saying that county election supervisors would remove felons from the rolls without using the state list. Florida is one of seven states that ban felons from voting, unless they successfully petition to have their rights restored.

Dr. Berry said she was concerned that Ms. Hood's new plan would be even worse than the original problem, possibly violating Bush v. Gore, the landmark case that stopped recounts in the 2000 presidential election because there was no uniform standard among Florida's counties for counting votes.

Representatives of civil rights organizations who testified said they were already planning lawsuits to stop county efforts to purge voters.

"Florida is absolutely committed to blocking voters," said Barbara Arnwine, director of the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. "All of the civil rights organizations are in intense discussions, and we think there are three or four lawsuits that should be filed here."

Gracia Hillman, the vice chairwoman of the Election Assistance Commission, told the civil rights commission yesterday that her agency did not have the authority to deny Florida its share of federal money appropriated under the Help America Vote Act. Florida has already received $47 million this year, and is eligible for an additional $85 million.

The commission also sharply questioned a representative from Accenture, the private company that Florida retained to help set up the felon-matching operation. Dr. Berry wanted to know who had failed to find the flaw that resulted in Hispanic felons being left off the purge list.

Meg McLaughlin, an Accenture partner, said she did not know, but that it was not her company's responsibility.

Under the state's methodology, if a name and birth date were matched in the felon and voter databases, but the races did not match, the person was not put on the purge list. Ms. McLaughlin said her company did not know that the state's felon database did not have a designation for Hispanic, a fact that resulted in only a handful of the state's approximately 650,000 registered Hispanic voters making the purge list, compared with more than 20,000 blacks.

Hispanics tend to register as Republicans in Florida, while blacks are overwhelmingly Democrats.

"We were not provided with that information," Ms. McLaughlin said, adding, "I would think we should have been."

She declined to say whose responsibility it was to give the company the information.