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Suffering Suffrage!
(3/03)
Take a deep breath-or better yet, a stiff drink. Don't
watch any news if it makes you too sick, and try to get plenty
of fluids (hopefully of the aforementioned variety). But
before succumbing to the war fever that is supposedly gripping
the nation, take time to think a bit. I just read a piece on
vote suppression by Joe Conason, and even though I feel sick I
must admit it struck a chord. I've been mulling over some
thoughts about this particular election, its ancestors and its
progeny, and the GOP's penchant for vote suppression is as
good a place to start as any.
'Challenging voters' under the guise of 'preventing fraud'
is an old White Supremacy trick--and until Florida 2000, it
was widely acknowledged as such. What the Democrats' cynical
reaction to 2000 did was far worse than their short-term
mindset could have imagined. It allowed the right wing to
dress up this old racist scam just like David Duke tried to do
with the Klan in Louisiana. The measured, lawyerly response
allowed the slick, 'modern' argument about accuracy to become
the new republican mantra--which hampers progressive efforts
for years to come. What we rightly tried to do--and were
discouraged from--is to make Jim Baker look like Bull Connor.
God knows he fit the bill enough, with his puffy red face
screaming into the cameras. Without exaggeration, he was
basically 'Keepin the niggers down,' as Randy Newman might
say.
The poster boy and the poster moment for reactionary
resistance to voter reform was always Strom Thurmond's
historic filibuster against the Voting Rights Act. Instead, it
has been allowed to transform itself into a sort of
Klansmanship Without Robes. Imagine John Ashcroft, a stone's
throw from being a Klansman himself, sending out monitors to
'make sure that every vote counts!' It is Bizarro World stuff,
the The Big Lie run amok.
No, I'm not ranting here. I'm convinced this really is the
crux of the matter. Those of us on the left all believe, more
or less and to varying degrees, in some version of what we
might call the SPM: Suppressed Progressive Majority. It's not
a pipe dream or wishful thinking--common sense also dictates
that the people shouldn't collectively vote consistently
against their own interest. And yet elections yield far worse
calamities than our failure to see this majority emerge in the
U.S. Across Latin America, people have voted for their own
killers time after time, in the grip of fear, bribery and the
Big Lie. One of many nagging problems is that broader
participation is anathema to incumbency on both the right and
left. New voters, more work, uncertainty, and more money.
Basically, it's just a big pain in the ass.
This is why no mainstream political force has pursued it
aggressively with the exception of the Democrats in the Civil
Rights era. White politicians, for the most part, were dragged
to it kicking and screaming, but it was one of the party's
finest hours. And the modern Knights of Reaction believe
fervently that vote suppression is cheaper and more effective
than expansion (as Joe Conason's insights show). Basically,
reactionary forces have put up barriers to voting as quickly
as others fall, from the Black Codes to Klan intimidation to
Jim Crow to poll taxes to reading tests to loyalty oaths and
Byzantine registration processes.
There is an unbroken historical link from slavery to the
scrubbing of voter rolls in the name of accuracy and fraud
prevention. Across the country, but most pervasively in the
old Jim Crow South, restrictions on felons voting have
continued this trend, with the more insidious form being a
permanent loss of suffrage, even after convicts have served
their time. A demographic footnote? Hardly. What this means is
that, notably in something like nine states of the old
Confederacy, upwards of 20% of black men are temporarily or
permanently disenfranchised. Now, we may be accused of
arrogance simply to assume that these potential souls 'belong'
to the left or progressive majority. But the consistent
targeting of this and other constituencies by the right
certainly implies that they think so (such as those targeted
by Bill Rehnquist in the nefarious Operation Eagle Eye in
Arizona in the early 60's-and no, it didn't hurt his
appointment as Chief Justice).
Playing off the poor white against black has of course also
been an insidious historical trick, and another of slavery's
distorting legacies. It is undoubtedly one of the reasons why
the U.S. is the only major industrial democracy without a
worker's party (why the hell not??) or serious popular front
coalition, where racism hampered efforts time and again. But
my point here is about structural barriers, and how the well
funded right wing electoral project is able to magnify its
perceived majority. Taking Tuesday's vote, for example, it
would be unwise not to concede a victory for reaction. But
perspective is always an important antidote to despair. The
electorate, and more importantly a slim majority of that
subelectorate that could be coaxed to vote, was scared to
death, pure and simple.
Bucking demographic, historic and economic trends, this
election result is an anomaly, an obvious, logical reaction to
the fear instilled by the events of last September. It needn't
have been so, and quite arguably wouldn't be without the
fomenting of Bush and his henchmen storming the country
shouting 'boo' at every turn, flat out lying about Iraq and
al-Qaeda and bashing the U.N. It has been Halloween all year
for this cabal, and it's only getting scarier. Before moving
to Canada, consider that more sophisticated polling reveals
that-surprise!--when people know the truth they are less
stupid (not such an obvious fact for many of us on the morning
after the elections). But a poll on Iraq which correlated
people's awareness that there is no reliable evidence of a
connection with al-Qaeda revealed that those who caught the
lie oppose the war by a massive margin.
Feel just a little bit better? I thought you might. For a
sweetener, add in the fact that Missouri was decided by 22,500
votes in a special election that wasn't even supposed to take
place but for a plane crash that killed Jean Carnahan's
husband two years ago. Speculating yet again, though the 2000
voting trends seem to give us ample room for it, Mel today
would be serving out the last four years in a seat he wrested
from John Ashcroft, not fighting for his political life in the
wake of September 11 war fever.
Likewise, another plane crash might have altered the course
of history, with the 55,000-vote margin that sank Mondale's
seat in Minnesota (it's around 40,000 if you count the
absentee votes for Wellstone. They were thrown out because no
one can really be sure if those who bothered to vote early for
Paul Wellstone wouldn't really have supported the republicans
and their right wing agenda). Speculating yet again-isn't this
fun?-we saw Wellstone pulling ahead before his untimely death.
The obscenity of republicans in Minnesota spitting on his
grave (repulsive, but effective) with their mock 'outrage'
over his memorial service (which they charged was repulsive,
but secretly envied as effective) was just the chest beating
they needed to reenergize their base in the final days. [For
the record, I told a Catholic priest to go to hell when he
tried to tell me what I could say at my father's funeral, but
maybe that's just me.] So what? No one can predict the
weather, right? Well, okay, but I'm just saying….
Besides, I'm talking about structure, not climate. This
isn't sour grapes, and I'm not just venting either. My point
isn't that WE WUZ ROBBED. We IZ robbed, but in a much greater
way than some touch screen fiasco in Florida. By the way,
isn't anyone alarmed at the abolition of the paper ballot? My
head almost exploded when I heard about this. But back to our
friend, the Senate. The point is not just about vote counting,
but the magnification of the result through the structural
prism of our electoral system. All told, the republicans
garnered about 1.6 million more votes for Senate candidates
than Democrats. A three or four percent split. Hardly a
whisper, I know-hey, I already admitted it was a reactionary
night. But with those votes they scooped up 23 Senate seats to
the Democrats' 10.
And, since it's structural, this phenomenon is not unique
to this election. The Senate, itself a throwback to the belief
that a barrier to direct democracy was necessary to calm the
rabble-a sort of modified House-of-Lords type bulwark-is
endemically prone to this thwarting of popular will. The very
institution was conceived, in part, as a hedge by the
slaveholding Southern states of the new republic against being
overrun by the more populous north. This form of
super-representation spread like a virus as new states entered
the Union, compounded by the win/win compromise that allowed
slavery's proponents to pimp off their chattel for
representation without giving them the franchise.
And so it goes: everyone gets their two cents-or in this
case, two Senators, from Wyoming to California. Except, of
course, for the good people of DC, who perversely don't merit
representation in this ponzi scheme because they allegedly
have 50 Senators-and right in their own backyard, too!
Ironically, in their attempt to fend off the potential
bogeyman of Tyranny of the Majority, the (Slaveholding)
Founding Fathers virtually ensured that this tyranny would be
magnified beyond recognition, and that minority voices would
never be heard.
The winner take all arrangement when the Senate moved to
direct election, as well as the Electoral College, gives these
overrepresented constituencies a Supervote that has ballooned
with the growth of the republic. Again, who am I to deny this
stacked deck advantage to the oppressed poor progressives of
Montana and Wyoming? And how dare I automatically assume that
our beloved SPM is concentrated in the underrepresented
constituencies? Sue me-or consult the Bureau of Labor
Statistics. Your choice. But whatever you do, don't grant true
voting rights for DC. That would apparently just compound the
problem (not to mention give the left two progressive black
Senators).
What bears repeating is that Eleanor Holmes Norton garnered
113,000 votes, more than most of her (voting) House
counterparts. Pundits who decry low black turnout have it
backwards: the real story is why they bother to vote at all.
The late Stephen Jay Gould, eminent natural historian,
crusader against creationism, and spellbinding lecturer and
writer, fascinated me with his penchant for explaining just
about any phenomenon with a baseball analogy. Though an avid
Red Sox fan as a kid, I have never taken sports that seriously
as an adult. It's just a sport-you know? That's why it always
surprises me that, in one realm, people would instinctively
laugh you out of the room at the suggestion that Sox fans
would pay just as close attention if their team isn't playing.
Or root for the Yankees to win the World Series (hey, it's
still OUR league, isn't it?) And yet black voters are supposed
to be imbued with a sort of superhuman altruism in the voting
game.
The amazing thing is that they still answer the call. In
this game, without proportional representation (or in DC's
case without any at all) it is completely impossible for
minorities to get their cut without piggybacking off a
majority winner. Not in a negotiated coalition for a share of
control, of course, but only for the table scraps-which are
getting less appetizing under the tyranny of the DLC. Maybe
this explains why black voters are less prone to being picked
off by third party candidacies than their liberal white
counterparts. Being junior partners in a coalition is all they
can ever squeeze out of this system. It's the same for other
constituencies on the left, of course, but most don't quite
realize how the winner-take-all scheme nullifies their vote.
And it is only by the bizarre gerrymandering of districts
than any semblance of representation is maintained in the
House-but of course this is neatly countered by the Supervotes
already discussed. It seems like we've been here before, but
the whole nut seems to come back to the fact that the Civil
War is still unfinished business. Hey-don't blame me-I'm just
a spectator. The undocumented aliens I descend from weren't in
the country yet-and we weren't even considered white back
then.
Yes, I've hear the reverent arguments about the wisdom of
Tom Jefferson and his friends (though Sally Hemming might
disagree, in hindsight). In a federated republic, the
supermajority prevents fragmentation by giving a mandate to
the True Majority. The one small problem is that True Majority
only equals the true majority in times of enormous crisis,
like the 1930's. And possibly the Great Opportunity of 1964
(later squandered on Johnson's War). At least those are the
only times our SPM is able to punch through the Class Ceiling
of American politics. The sad fact is that without structural
change, the victories we long for will elude us.
Take your pick from a laundry list of options: statehood
for DC, proportional voting, apportionment of seats, instant
runoff voting, abolition of the electoral college, replacement
of the Senate (sorry, Ted, sorry Strom)-not to mention
sincere, rigorous enforcement and expansion of the Voting
Rights Act. I'm not stupid or pie-eyed enough to suggest that
this guarantees victory. But you just can't win without
unrigging the game. These structural changes should be the
among the top priorities of every progressive campaign from
now until victory, first, because it's right (whew-glad we got
that out of the way-and secondly, because it's a winning
electoral strategy for the long term).
This is not the place to brag-well hey, screw it, why not
brag? I'm proud of (most of) the political work I've done:
from organizing, demonstrating, work in progressive campaigns,
in Nicaragua, support for left causes, strikes, and so on....
But of all of it, I think one of my most radical
accomplishments was a tiny little campaign a roommate and I
ran on a dorm council in college. The council, whose meetings
we almost never attended, was a direct democracy. There was no
representation, and yet over the years the clique of members
(whom we nastily and somewhat unfairly dubbed the Politburo)
had instituted bylaws tying voting rights to various
attendance requirements. 'What if the jocks brought a bunch of
friends and raided the till by voting all the money for a
party in their suite?' was a standard argument. Tough
shit-bring your own clique-was our retort. Hey-it's either a
direct democracy or a representative one. It can't be both a
council and a club.
I know, it might be a silly anecdote. Voting is supposed to
be serious business (like baseball). But the practice of
democracy is simply not something people are exposed
to-despite our lofty rhetoric-in their workplaces, homes,
schools and institutions. People can call me a cockeyed
optimist or romantic fool (for believing the SPM exists at
all) or an insufferable downer (for believing that it will
never emerge without structural change). But I still have a
populist streak in me, and I do believe in the SPM. And I do
believe that it will never emerge without structural change.
Please-call me a cockeyed optimist.
© 2003 Daniel Patrick Welch. Reprint
permission granted.
^ Top ^
Welch lives and writes in Salem, Massachusetts, USA,
with his wife, Julia Nambalirwa-Lugudde. Together they run The
Greenhouse School. His columns have also been aired
on radio. Others interested in airing the audio version
(electronic recording available) please contact the author.
Welch speaks several languages and is available for recordings
in French, German, Russian and Spanish pending a reliable
translation, or, alternatively, telephone interviews in the
target language.
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