Was the Election Stolen?
By Greg
Palast
Bush won Ohio by 136,483 votes.
Typically in the United States, about 3 percent of votes cast are voided-known
as “spoilage” in election jargon-because the ballots cast are
inconclusive. Palast’s investigation suggests that if Ohio’s
discarded ballots were counted, Kerry would have won the state. Today the
Cleveland Plain Dealer reports there are a total of 247,672 votes not
counted in Ohio, if you add the 92,672 discarded votes plus the 155,000
provisional ballots.
Greg Palast, contributing editor to
Harper’s magazine, investigated the manipulation of the vote for BBC
Television’s Newsnight. The documentary, “Bush Family
Fortunes,” based on his New York Times bestseller, The Best Democracy
Money Can Buy, has been released this month on DVD
.
Kerry won. Here’s the
facts.
I know you don’t want
to hear it. You can’t face one more hung chad. But I don’t have a
choice. As a journalist examining that messy sausage called American democracy,
it’s my job to tell you who got the most votes in the deciding states.
Tuesday, in Ohio and New Mexico, it was John
Kerry.
Most voters in Ohio thought they
were voting for Kerry. CNN’s exit poll showed Kerry beating Bush among
Ohio women by 53 percent to 47 percent. Kerry also defeated Bush among
Ohio’s male voters 51 percent to 49 percent. Unless a third gender voted
in Ohio, Kerry took the state.
So
what’s going on here? Answer: the exit polls are accurate. Pollsters ask,
“Who did you vote for?” Unfortunately, they don’t ask the
crucial, question, “Was your vote counted?” The voters don’t
know.
Here’s why. Although the exit
polls show that most voters in Ohio punched cards for Kerry-Edwards, thousands
of these votes were simply not recorded. This was predictable and it was
predicted. [See TomPaine.com, “An Election Spoiled Rotten,”
November 1.]
Once again, at the heart
of the Ohio uncounted vote game are, I’m sorry to report, hanging chads
and pregnant chads, plus some other ballot tricks old and
new.
The election in Ohio was not
decided by the voters but by something called “spoilage.” Typically
in the United States, about 3 percent of the vote is voided, just thrown away,
not recorded. When the bobble-head boobs on the tube tell you Ohio or any state
was won by 51 percent to 49 percent, don’t you believe it ... it has never
happened in the United States, because the total never reaches a neat 100
percent. The television totals simply subtract out the spoiled
vote.
And not all vote spoil equally.
Most of those votes, say every official report, come from African American and
minority precincts.
We saw this in
Florida in 2000. Exit polls showed Gore with a plurality of at least 50,000, but
it didn’t match the official count. That’s because the official,
Secretary of State Katherine Harris, excluded 179,855 spoiled votes. In
Florida, as in Ohio, most of these votes lost were cast on punch cards where the
hole wasn’t punched through completely-leaving a ‘hanging
chad,’-or was punched extra times. Whose cards were discarded? Expert
statisticians investigating spoilage for the government calculated that 54
percent of the ballots thrown in the dumpster were cast by black folks.
And here’s the key: Florida is
terribly typical. The majority of ballots thrown out (there will be nearly 2
million tossed out from Tuesday’s election) will have been cast by African
American and other minority citizens.
So here
we go again. Or, here we don’t go again. Because unlike last time,
Democrats aren’t even asking Ohio to count these cards with the
not-quite-punched holes (called “undervotes” in the voting
biz).
Ohio is one of the last states in
America to still use the vote-spoiling punch-card machines. And the Secretary of
State of Ohio, J. Kenneth Blackwell, wrote before the election, “the
possibility of a close election with punch cards as the state’s primary
voting device invites a Florida-like
calamity.”
But this week,
Blackwell, a rabidly partisan Republican, has warmed up to the result of
sticking with machines that have a habit of eating Democratic votes. When asked
if he feared being this year’s Katherine Harris, Blackwell noted that Ms.
Fix-it’s efforts landed her a seat in
Congress.
Exactly how many votes were
lost to spoilage this time? Blackwell’s office, notably, won’t say,
though the law requires it be reported. Hmm. But we know that last time, the
total of Ohio votes discarded reached a democracy-damaging 1.96 percent. The
machines produced their typical loss-that’s 110,000 votes-overwhelmingly
Democratic.
The Impact Of
Challenges
First and foremost,
Kerry was had by chads. But the Democrat wasn’t punched out by punch cards
alone. There were also the ‘challenges.’ That’s a polite word
for the Republican Party of Ohio’s use of an old Ku Klux Klan technique:
the attempt to block thousands of voters of color at the polls. In Ohio,
Wisconsin and Florida, the GOP laid plans for poll workers to ambush citizens
under arcane laws-almost never used-allowing party-designated poll watchers to
finger individual voters and demand they be denied a ballot. The Ohio courts
were horrified and federal law prohibits targeting of voters where race is a
factor in the challenge. But our Supreme Court was prepared to let Republicans
stand in the voting booth door.
In the
end, the challenges were not overwhelming, but they were there. Many apparently
resulted in voters getting these funky “provisional” ballots-a kind
of voting placebo-which may or may not be counted.
Blackwell estimates there were
175,000; Democrats say 250,000. Pick your number. But as challenges were aimed
at minorities, no one doubts these are, again, overwhelmingly Democratic. Count
them up, add in the spoiled punch cards (easy to tally with the human eye in a
recount), and the totals begin to match the exit polls; and, golly, you’ve
got yourself a new president. Remember, Bush won by 136,483 votes in
Ohio.
Enchanted State’s
Enchanted Vote
Now, on to New
Mexico, where a Kerry plurality-if all votes are counted-is more obvious still.
Before the election, in TomPaine.com, I wrote, “John Kerry is down by
several thousand votes in New Mexico, though not one ballot has yet been
counted.”
How did that happen?
It’s the spoilage, stupid; and the provisional
ballots.
CNN said George Bush took New
Mexico by 11,620 votes. Again, the network total added up to that miraculous,
and non-existent, ‘100 percent’ of ballots
cast.
New Mexico reported in the last
race a spoilage rate of 2.68 percent, votes lost almost entirely in Hispanic,
Native American and poor precincts-Democratic turf. From Tuesday’s vote,
assuming the same ballot-loss rate, we can expect to see 18,000 ballots in the
spoilage bin.
Spoilage has a very
Democratic look in New Mexico. Hispanic voters in the Enchanted State, who voted
more than two to one for Kerry, are five times as likely to have their vote
spoil as a white voter. Counting these uncounted votes would easily overtake the
Bush ‘plurality.’
Already,
the election-bending effects of spoilage are popping up in the election stats,
exactly where we’d expect them: in heavily Hispanic areas controlled by
Republican elections officials. Chaves County, in the “Little Texas”
area of New Mexico, has a 44 percent Hispanic population, plus African Americans
and Native Americans, yet George Bush “won” there 68 percent to 31
percent.
I spoke with Chaves’
Republican county clerk before the election, and he told me that this huge
spoilage rate among Hispanics simply indicated that such people simply
can’t make up their minds on the choice of candidate for president. Oddly,
these brown people drive across the desert to register their indecision in a
voting booth.
Now, let’s add in
the effect on the New Mexico tally of provisional
ballots.
“They were handing them
out like candy,” Albuquerque journalist Renee Blake reported of
provisional ballots. About 20,000 were given out. Who got
them?
Santiago Juarez who ran the
“Faithful Citizenship” program for the Catholic Archdiocese in New
Mexico, told me that “his” voters, poor Hispanics, whom he
identified as solid Kerry supporters, were handed the iffy provisional ballots.
Hispanics were given provisional ballots, rather than the countable kind
“almost religiously,” he said, at polling stations when there was
the least question about a voter’s identification. Some voters, Santiago
said, were simply turned
away.
Your Kerry Victory
Party
So we can call Ohio and New
Mexico for John Kerry-if we count all the
votes.
But that won’t happen.
Despite the Democratic Party’s pledge, the leadership this time gave in to
racial disenfranchisement once again. Why? No doubt, the Democrats know darn
well that counting all the spoiled and provisional ballots will require the
cooperation of Ohio’s Secretary of State, Blackwell. He will ultimately
decide which spoiled and provisional ballots get tallied. Blackwell, hankering
to step into Kate Harris’ political pumps, is unlikely to permit anything
close to a full count. Also, Democratic leadership knows darn well the media
would punish the party for demanding a full
count.
What now? Kerry won, so hold
your victory party. But make sure the shades are down: it may be become illegal
to demand a full vote count under PATRIOT Act
III.
I used to write a column for the
Guardian papers in London. Several friends have asked me if I will again leave
the country. In light of the failure-a second time-to count all the votes, that
won’t be necessary. My country has left me.
Posted: Mon - November 1, 2004 at 02:47 PM