Media
Blacks Out Voting Problems
By David Swanson, ILCA Media Coordinator
Part of the Media Blackout series on underreported labor stories
The "mainstream"
media has fallen down on the job by failing to cover efforts since November
2 to ensure that all votes in the presidential election are accurately
counted. The conclusion by John Kerry that an investigation could not
possibly reverse the election may quite possibly have been premature.
But the question that both activists and the media should be asking
is not whether there was enough fraud and errors to decide the election,
nor even whether there was more than is usual, but whether there was
any fraud or errors, where the problems occurred, how they can be prevented
in the future, and -- in particular -- whether new kinds of fraud were
permitted by new technologies and by the privatization of our election
process.
The ILCA is particularly
concerned, because of indications, detailed below, that fraud may have
occurred in areas where there are heavy populations of workers, African-Americans,
and other progressive voters that our member organizations represent.
People deserve to have their votes counted, and the strategists who
will spend four years studying the election results deserve to have
the facts. Some citizens and independent media outlets are raising these
issues, but the corporate media is AWOL. An investigation by the media
would seem especially appropriate, since the 2000 election led to investigations
in Florida that determined the loser was occupying the White House.
Evidence existed
before this election that quite possibly "the fix" was in:
the co-chair of the Bush-Cheney campaign in Ohio was running the 2004
election in that state and had for weeks been demonstrating every intention
to disenfranchise Democrats; the head of a company manufacturing electronic
voting machines for use around the country had announced his intention
to help Bush stay in the White House. The weaknesses and susceptibility
to abuse of electronic voting machines, including the machines that
many people vote on and the machines that add up the votes from multiple
precincts, had been well documented.
QUESTIONS ABOUT
EXIT POLLS
If the pre-election
context wasn't enough to put the media on alert, the exit polls on election
day should have been. The polls by the National Election Pool, throughout
the day, showed Kerry ahead in a number of swing states. Media commentators
made it quite clear that they had seen and took seriously the polls.
Professional pollster John Zogby took them seriously enough to call
the race for Kerry. Wall Street took them seriously enough to start
dropping stock prices.
Back on September
28, the New York Post, in agreement with other U.S. media outlets, editorialized
that the results of a recall election in Venezuela had been proven fraudulent
by exit polls. "It is unconscionable," the Post quoted Jimmy
Carter as saying, "to perpetuate fraudulent or biased electoral
practices in any nation." The Post then commented:
"Oh, really?
Funny, Carter quickly endorsed the results of last month's recall effort
against Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez. Chavez, a pal of dictators
from Saddam Hussein to Fidel Castro, officially beat back the recall
with nearly 59 percent of the vote. Oddly, that result was completely
opposite the findings of an exit poll conducted by a well-regarded polling
firm used often by the U.S. Democratic Party, which showed Venezuelan
voters booting Chavez by the same 59 percent....Yet Jimmy Carter said
that the election was 'free and fair.'"
Other U.S. media
coverage was similar. The Miami Herald ran this headline: "Find
Out If Chavez Stole Vote." United Press International ran a column
arguing that Carter was unqualified to criticize voting procedures in
Florida because exit polls had proved him wrong in Venezuela. Carter
had said that Florida's voting arrangements didn't meet "basic
international requirements."
On October 17,
the New York Times ran an article on the use of exit polls to identify
and prevent election fraud in a number of countries. The article suggested
that exit polls might play a similar role in the upcoming U.S. election.
A November 5
New York Times article, and the rest of the U.S. media's coverage after
the election, sang a very different tune, building in as an unargued
assumption that the November 2 exit polls had been proved wrong by the
official vote counts. The Times' article sought to determine in a very
"balanced" and "objective" manner exactly what went
wrong with the exit polls, but not whether they were wrong or right.
The New York
Post switched song books as well, running on November 3 in its online
edition a column by Dick Morris demanding to know who had rigged the
exit polls. Exit polls, according to Morris, cannot be off by as much
as they were this time without intentional fraud. Morris presented no
evidence of fraud in the exit polling and no evidence that it was the
polls rather than the official counts that got it wrong.
As pointed out
in various analyses, the exit polls were accurate within their margin
of error in many states but were surprisingly far off in a number of
swing states, and always off in the same direction, showing more support
for Kerry than was found in the official counts. Warren Mitofsky, co-director
of the National Election Pool, told the News Hour with Jim Lehrer that
"Kerry was ahead in a number of states by margins that looked unreasonable
to us." Mitofsky speculated that perhaps more Kerry voters were
willing to participate in the exit poll, but did not suggest any reason
for that speculation other than the difference between the exit polls
and the final counts. He and his colleagues have since produced other
speculative reasons why the exit polls could have been wrong, all grounded
in circular reasoning. Mitofsky told the News Hour that on the evening
of November 2 he decided to wait for the official counts and then use
those to "correct" the exit polls, thus rendering the hugely
expensive exit polls useless as either predictors of the election outcome
or measurements of the count's accuracy. Media outlets "corrected"
the exit polls on their websites early in the morning of November 3.
Mitofsky promised in the future to keep exit poll results secret, thus
fully rendering them useless for any stated purpose related to election
outcomes (they will still be able to tell us after the fact how many
voters were female or Jewish or go to church weekly or believe health
care is the most important issue, etc.).
Other surprising
outcomes should stimulate investigation, including the low gain in voter
turnout for Kerry in Florida despite massive get-out-the-vote efforts
and widely reported record lines at polls on election day and in early
voting.
MISCOUNTING DOCUMENTED
Reasons for concern
over this election are, however, no longer limited to surprise over
the outcome. Nor need this issue be focused on the uncountable votes
of those wrongly denied voting status, turned away, intimidated, forced
to vote on provisional ballots, or discouraged from voting by long lines.
Specific evidence
of miscounting has been uncovered. And, despite the national media's
near-blackout of the issue, local reporting has documented some of the
problems. In fact, although you won't learn it from the corporate media,
three members of Congress have asked the General Accounting Office to
investigate irregularities with voting machines in the November 2 election.
The Congress Members, John Conyers, Jerrold Nadler, and Robert Wexler,
cited a few of the problems that have already arisen, including a machine
in a single Ohio precinct awarding Bush an extra 3,893 votes, machines
in North Carolina losing 4,500 votes, machines in Florida miscounting
absentee ballots, and voters in both Florida and Ohio reporting machines
registering votes for Bush that were intended for Kerry.
More troubling
than these problems and others like them is the fact that much of the
electronic vote counting is in the hands of private companies, produces
no auditable record, and can easily be tampered with. A leading investigator
of this problem, BlackBoxVoting.org, appeared in 23 "mainstream"
media articles or transcripts in the weeks leading up to the election,
according to a Nexis search, but only one since then, and that was a
mention by a caller to a radio show. BlackBoxVoting has not vanished
from the media because it's ceased activity. Rather, it's launched the
largest series of FOIA requests in history and announced that it believes
fraud took place in the election.
An analysis reported
on by Thom Hartmann found that in Florida, in the smaller counties in
which optically scanned ballots were counted on a central computer the
results were quite surprising. For example, Franklin County, with 77.3
percent registered Democrats, went 58.5 percent for Bush. Holmes County,
with 72.7 percent registered Democrats, went 77.25 percent for Bush.
"Yet in the larger counties," Hartmann noted, "where
such anomalies would be more obvious to the news media, high percentages
of registered Democrats equaled high percentages of votes for Kerry….
And, although elections officials didn't notice these anomalies, in
aggregate they were enough to swing Florida from Kerry to Bush. If you
simply go through the analysis of these counties and reverse the 'anomalous'
numbers in those counties that appear to have been hacked, suddenly
the Florida election results resemble the Florida exit poll results:
Kerry won, and won big."
According to
Hartmann, the Democratic candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives
from Florida's 16th District, Jeff Fisher, claimed to have evidence
of hacking that would explain these results, and to be turning that
evidence over to the FBI. Bev Harris of BlackBoxVoting.org explained
how easy such hacking is on a CNBC talk show some months back. Watch
the clip. The "mainstream" media has not touched this story.
Nor has the corporate
media touched on the topic of spoiled ballots and hanging chads in Ohio,
which BBC reporter Greg Palast believes wrongly cost Kerry the election
there.
The stories of
election problems that would seem to merit investigation are numerous.
See, for example, these: one, two, three, four, five, six. In New Hampshire,
the Nader/Camejo campaign has challenged the electronic voting results.
In Auglaize County, Ohio, in October, a former employee of Election
Systems and Software (ES&S), the company that provides the voting
system in Auglaize County, was allegedly on the main computer that is
used to create the ballot and compile election results, which would
go against election protocol.
The mainstream
media will not report these claims unless indisputable evidence is produced
that Kerry won the election. And, if the 2000 election is any guide,
the media will bury the story even then. In the meantime, following
the narrowest win for a sitting president since Woodrow Wilson, the
media has announced that Bush has a "clear mandate" to enact
his agenda – an agenda that the media is reporting on more now
than prior to the election.
Clearly the top
agenda item for those who care about democracy in this country must
be reshaping our media. Passing media reform through Congress presents
the same chicken-and-egg problem as campaign finance reform or term
limits or instant runoff voting or greater access for third parties:
how do you force politicians to oppose their own interests and those
of their funders?
An alternative
is to build our own media to compete with the corporate version. Rebuilding
labor media is the mission of the ILCA, and we see that mission as having
just grown more important than ever.
______________________________________________________
The International
Labor Communications Association (ILCA), founded in 1955, is the professional
organization of labor communicators in North America. The ILCA’s
several hundred members produce publications with a total circulation
in the tens of millions.
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