The One-Two Punch of Racism: Whitewashing the Voter
Fraud Issue
By Greg Moses
www.opednews.com
Racism is best known among white folks for the overt
ways that bigotry chooses to abuse. This is what allows white liberals to
excuse themselves from charges that they are racist, because (God bless 'em)
they don't set out to hurt anybody. But Ralph Ellison titled his classic
novel Invisible Man, because racism is a grim problem also of what white
folks do not see.
And this problem persists insufferably, right down to
this morning's news.
On this day after the election-fraud hearings led by
John Conyers and his Democratic colleagues at the Judiciary Committee, I
am beginning to feel the effects of racism's one-two punch. On the overt
side, we have the written testimony of Judith A. Browne, acting
co-director of the Advancement Project in Washington, D.C.
For Browne, whose testimony to the Conyers committee is
posted online, "voters of color" have been targets of
Republican-led disenfranchisement in the elections of 2000 and 2004.
http://www.house.gov/judiciary_democrats/brownevotestmt12804.pdf
"In 2004," writes Brown, it became clear
that there were efforts underway to dust off Reconstruction Era statutes
in order to disenfranchise voters, particularly minority voters."
"There were clear warnings that challenges would be
used to disenfranchise voters," says Browne. "Prior to Election
Day in Nevada and Ohio, 17,000 and 35,000 challenges were filed,
respectively, disproportionately in urban areas. (Over 17,000 of the Ohio
challenges were filed in Cuyahoga County.) In addition, poll observers
registered in unprecedented numbers in Florida and Ohio, with the intent
to engage in massive challenges inside polling places."
Browne is referring to laws that allow poll watchers to
act as self-deputized vigilantes at voting precincts, thrusting their
bodies between ballot boxes and voters, demanding proofs of identification
and registration.
If you have never seen this process at work, then you
might not feel the nausea. But I have seen them, the close shaven,
starched-pants Republicans who show up on election day to a black
community center and lean over old women with their dirty questions. Makes
you want to spank them on their freshly cut heads. Didn't their mothers
teach them no manners?
"The targets," Browne reports, "were new
voters in urban areas." Or to put it more plainly, new Black voters,
the "Vote or Die" crowd that P-Diddy was trying to mobilize.
Add to this the "felon purge" technique, in
which Republican Party officials, knowing that they are working with
felon lists "tainted by racial discrimination", set
out to challenge thousands of voters by the batch.
"This," says Brown, "is voter suppression
in 2004."
And this is what we may call racism of the overt bigotry
kind. Racism type one. On this form of racism, Browne's statement
continues for several more pages at the Conyers hearing website.
Which brings us to racism type two, the invisibility
maneuver. For this type of racism, it's best to begin with liberal
columnists. Scan their morning-after reports for words like
"minority", "black", "civil rights." Or try
this Google test. First do a news search for Conyers hearings. Very good,
lots of fresh hits. Now try a news search for Judith Browne Advancement
Project under "News." See there. Your search did not match any
documents (at 9:25 am CST).
Overt racism by right-wing Republicans is the core
dynamic at work here, but it is aided and abetted by invisibility racism
found in left commentators and media reports, who fail to center the civil
rights struggle. An issue that is clearly about racism and civil rights
has been whitewashed into "voter fraud"
generica. Type one racism answered with type two.
Browne's careful citation of race-based discrimination
followed by Browne's invisibility in the press. The one-two punch
continues.
There may not be much that can happen to change the
results of the presidential election, so the whitewashing of
"election fraud" may not have an immediate consequence for those
who are focused on the Bush machine today. But here in Texas, Republicans
are taking three newly elected Democrats into a costly process of hearings
before a Republican-controlled chamber. "Election fraud" is the
allegation that Republicans are bringing against the Democrats.
In Texas, therefore, the generic cry of election
fraud will very likely make invisible the crucial civil rights
component that ties together the fates of three would-be state legislators
with racist powers in Ohio and Florida.
In particular, take the case of Hubert Vo, a Vietnamese
immigrant who beat a Republican powerhouse by about 30 votes. If the Vo
election is overturned by a Republican-led Legislature on whitewashed
charges of election fraud, then the losers will be a coalition
of urban voters who worked hard on this grassroots coup. And the winners
will be white suburban voters, again.
Yet, if the pattern of injustice in "voter
fraud" is a pattern that seeks to favor white suburban voters over
struggling urban voters, wherever they are, then making this pattern
visible, for once, could tip this 30 vote scale in Vo's favor, and reverse
for the first time in more than 30 years a steady trend toward Republican
domination of Texas politics.
The white left is meaningless without a civil rights
coalition. The sooner the white left embraces this, in deed and word, the
sooner we'll be able to see a real future in front of us. The sooner,
also, that a national movement of progressives can make a real difference
in the South.
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Greg Moses is editor of the Texas Civil Rights Review
and author of Revolution of Conscience: Martin Luther King, Jr. and the
Philosophy of Nonviolence. His chapter on civil rights under Clinton and
Bush appears in Dimes worth of Difference, edited by Alexander Cockburn
and Jeffrey St. Clair. http://www.texascivilrightsreview.org/phpnuke/
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