Monthly Archives: November 2011

Human Events on Guam Section 2 Case

Terry Pell at Human Events here.  A portion:

“. . . Guam, a territory of the United States, is subject to the U.S. Constitution and numerous federal laws that prohibit it from treating individuals differently on the basis of race. Unless and until it secedes from the United States, Guam and its officials are bound to observe the Constitution and laws that prohibit treating citizens differently on account of race.

More troubling than the existence of this overtly discriminatory law is the failure of Justice Department officials to take action against it. Despite its clear authority to enforce federal laws prohibiting race discrimination in voting, the Justice Department declined to intervene when presented with a complaint by Guam resident Arnold Davis, the plaintiff in the suit filed this week. Davis, a retired officer in the U.S. Air Force, was told he couldn’t register because he was not descended from a native inhabitant.

The Guam plebiscite bears a strong similarity to Hawaiian laws that formerly limited certain elections to native Hawaiians. The Supreme Court declared such laws unconstitutional in Rice v. Cayetano in 1996. Presumably to get around this problem, Guam claims its plebiscite is not limited by race at all, but only to ”native inhabitants.”

Pacific Daily News on Voting Rights Act case in Guam

My editorial in the Pacific Daily news about Davis v. Guam, the Section 2 case challenging the racially discriminatory status election which does not allow whites or Asians to participate.  A portion:

“The plaintiff in the lawsuit is a United States citizen who was denied the right to register to vote in the status election solely because he is white. Even in the Jim Crow south of the 1950s, blacks were legally allowed to register to vote if they could run the nasty gauntlet of character exams, citizenship quizzes and registration business hours which seemed to change anytime a black person went to the registration office.


While very few black citizens successfully navigated these racially motivated barriers to the ballot box, some did. In Guam, however, unless you are a member of the select racial group, you aren’t even allowed to register to vote in the status election. This is simply wrong. . . .

Camouflaging the racial discrimination in the Chamorro-only plebiscite does not change the fact it is racial discrimination. All citizens must be allowed to participate, or the political status election cannot take place under the law. . . .


Equality under the United States Constitution is a bedrock principle found wherever the American flag flies. Guam is no different. . . .


Eliminating any racially discriminatory component to the status election is about more than legal violations. It is also about treating your neighbors how you wish to be treated. Every person has individual dignity and should be treated equally by the law. No person has the right to say their opinions are more important than someone else’s opinion just because of their skin color, or the skin color of a grandparent. The human dignity of each person not permitted to participate in the status election is violated by the racially restrictive law challenged by the lawsuit.

In Minnesota, voter fraud charges emerge years later

Fox News reportsIt took a few years, but prosecutors are rolling out charges in response to accusations of felons voting in one of the tightest elections in the state.

Looking back, it’s clear that the 2008 election was significant for many reasons.
“Actually, that was my first time voting,” said Dwayne Thomas, of St. Paul.

Now, Thomas is facing two felony charges. He was not supposed to vote on Nov. 4, 2008, because he was still on probation for a previous felony.

Three years later, just before the statute of limitations would run out, Washington County prosecutors sent him back to jail.
 
“I just think it’s not right that they are doing this,” said Thomas. “I don’t really understand how they feel like I knew about it. I didn’t know about it.”
 
Prosecutors say they don’t buy that claim.

“That’s the same defense I’ve heard on other people who violate their probation,” said Rick Hodsdon, assistant Washington County Attorney. So far he’s charged 25 felons with illegally voting in the 2008 election and another seven for voting in 2010.
 
“Like many other crimes, this may have been going on for some time, but no one was ever able to sit down and track it and match it,” he said.

Artur Davis: Party Bosses are cooking the ballot box and manufacturing absentee ballots on Election Day

Artur Davis unfiltered on Daily Call. A must see video

The former Congressman is not happy at the way his fellow Black Americans are taken advantage of by the fraudulent means of a corrupt few.  Davis essentially argues that the progressives, comfortable in their D.C. offices, look the other way in the name of racial politics and the illusion of racial progress. 

This similar point was directly at issue in the Bush voter protection case in Noxubee County, Mississippi.   The point of the litigation was not to disrupt the electoral majority of Blacks; instead, it was to protect individual citizens and voters – Black and white – from the illegal exercise of power of those corrupted and willing to engage in intimidation and fraud to retain that power.  

Courageous.   

…former Democratic Rep. Artur Davis told The Daily Caller that anti-fraud measures are needed to protect African-Americans from corrupt political bosses — many of them African-Americans themselves — who run Democratic Party machines in the South.
On Nov. 14, progressive Democratic Reps. John Conyers, Steny Hoyer, Jerrold Nadler, Keith Ellison, Steve Cohen, Marcia Fudge and Emanuel Clearer, the chair of the Congressional Black Caucus — along with representatives from several advocacy groups — held a meeting to complain about what they say is the danger posed by laws that require voters to identify themselves.

Artur Davis is unimpressed.

“What I have seen in my state, in my region, is the the most aggressive practitioners of voter-fraud are local machines who are tied lock, stock and barrel to the special interests in their communities — the landfills, the casino operators — and they’re cooking the [ballot] boxes on election day, they’re manufacturing absentee ballots, they’re voting [in the names of] people named Donald Duck, because they want to control politics and thwart progress,” he told TheDC.

“People who are progressives have no business defending those individuals.”

In Florida, NAACP proposed redistricting maps have familiar look

From the Orlando Sentinel:  Republican lawmakers say voters who last year endorsed the anti-gerrymandering Fair Districts constitutional reforms may be in for a rude awakening when the first drafts of congressional and legislative maps are released in the coming weeks.

Something akin to: Meet the new maps, same as the old maps. To protect minority groups, the once-a-decade redrawing may not look that different from today —with jagged, oblong, or geometrically challenged districts zigzagging across the landscape, irrespective of municipal and county lines
.

and moreThe NAACP maps show congressional, House and Senate districts that look a lot like today’s — except for two new congressional districts gained through reapportionment, one a Hispanic-access seat east and south of Orlando.  And though a few more congressional and legislative districts might vote Democratic, based on 2010 and 2006 election results, the maps stop well short of major reforms. Consider:

•The number of congressional districts with majority-black voting-age populations would remain at two: the South Florida districts now held by Democrats Alcee Hastings and Frederica Wilson.

•Democratic U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown’s district — the poster child for Fair Districts supporters — would still meander from Jacksonville down to Orange County. Its black voting-age population would drop from 49 percent to 48 percent.

•The three existing Hispanic-majority seats — all in South Florida — would be preserved. A new District 27, slicing from Orlando southwest to Winter Garden, would be 42 percent Hispanic.

•Despite substantial growth in the state’s Hispanic population, the maps would only increase Hispanic-majority seats in the Florida House from 13 to 14. Black-majority seats would rise from 10 to 12. The Senate map keeps two black-majority seats and three Hispanic ones.

Voting Section will not object to Alabama’s new congressional lines

links @ CNN and Roll Call with the full story on DOJ preclearing the Alabama congressional lines.  Alabama held the Department of Justice’s feet to the fire by simultaneously suing in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. 

CNN:  Alabama has six white Republican members and one black Democratic member. The African-American lawmaker, Terri Sewell ,represents a district in which 63% of voters are black, a slight increase in the number of minority voters from the makeup of the old district.