In
an interview on the Fox News Channel on Monday, Trump explained his
objection to Democrats’ efforts to appropriate billions of dollars for
election security in the $2.2 trillion coronavirus relief package. “The
things they had in there were crazy,” he told the hosts. “They had
things, levels of voting that if you’d ever agreed to it, you’d never
have a Republican elected in this country again.” On Wednesday, the
Georgia House Speaker, Republican David Ralston, echoed Trump. He
opposed sending absentee ballots to the state’s registered voters
because the effort would lead to higher voter participation. That would
“be extremely devastating to Republicans and conservatives in Georgia.”
They
are saying out loud what scholars of politics have known for a long
time: the Republicans are a minority party. They win by keeping their
opponents from voting, or by making sure their votes are undercounted.
A
democracy is in crisis if the majority of its people do not support the
party in power. We can manage a glitch or two, but a systemic
perversion of the government through manipulation by one group or
another will destroy our faith that our government truly represents us.
Manipulating
the vote has a long and shameful history in America, but modern media
and computer modeling has enabled today’s Republican Party to carve out
its voters with surgical precision.
The
process of culling voters began in 1986, when Republicans who knew that
Reagan’s budget cuts were unpopular began to talk of cutting down black
voting. In a secret memo later made public by a judge, an official for
the Republican National Committee explained that paring the voting rolls
down in a call for “ballot integrity” “will eliminate at least
60-80,000 folks from the rolls.” Referring to a Senate race, the
official noted, “If it’s a close race, which I’m assuming it is, this
could keep the black vote down considerably.” (After the memo came out,
the chair of the RNC stated “there has never been, nor is there now, any
program at the Republican National Committee designed to intimidate or
discourage any voter from exercising his or her right to vote…. [T]he
purpose of the program was to help election officials make certain that
no dead or fictitious persons vote.”)
When
Democrats tried to expand voter registration in 1993 with the
Motor-Voter Law, which permitted people to sign up to vote when at
certain state offices-- including the Department of Motor Vehicles and
welfare offices-- Republicans insisted that the Democrats were simply
trying to register more of their own “special interest” voters and
fought the law.
The
next year, losing Republican candidates for office began to charge that
they had lost because of “voter fraud,” and in 1996, House and Senate
Republicans each launched year-long investigations into what they
insisted were problematic elections, including the one that put Dianne
Feinstein into the Senate from California. The loser in that contest,
who had spent more than $28 million of his own money on his campaign,
insisted on national television that there were serious voting
irregularities. “I think, frankly, the fraud is overwhelming,” he said.
Every study has shown that voter fraud is so rare as to be virtually
nonexistent, but Republican leaders kept the case in front of the media
for close to a year, helping to convince Americans that voter fraud was a
serious issue and that Democrats were winning elections thanks to
illegal, usually immigrant, voters.
In
1998, the Florida legislature passed a law to prevent such voter fraud,
and the law quickly became a purge of black voters, people presumed to
vote Democratic. In the election of 2000, Republican George W. Bush won
the state of Florida and thus the election by 537 votes. A later
investigation by the United States Commission on Civil Rights revealed
“an extraordinarily high and inexcusable level of disenfranchisement,”
primarily of Democratic African American voters, in that election.
When
Democrat Barack Obama won the presidency in 2008, Republicans set out
to guarantee he had a hostile Congress to keep him from accomplishing
anything. They raised money from corporate donors to elect Republicans
to state legislatures in 2010, so Republicans would redistrict key
states after the 2010 census, in a process called “gerrymandering.” They
called the plan “REDMAP,” for Redistricting Majority Project.
Republicans won control of the key states of Florida, Wisconsin, North
Carolina, Ohio, and Michigan, as well as other, smaller states, and they
used computer modeling to redraw congressional maps to their advantage.
In the 2012 election, Democrats won a majority of 1.4 million votes for
House candidates. And yet Republicans came away with 33 more seats than
Democrats in the House of Representatives.
The
next year, in 2013, when the Supreme Court gutted the 1965 Voting
Rights Act with the Shelby County v. Holder decision, by ruling that
states could change their voting laws without preclearance by the
Department of Justice, Republican state officials immediately began to
introduce voter ID laws and bills restricting voter registration.
And
now, as the coronavirus pandemic sweeps the nation right before the
2020 election, Trump and the Republican National Committee have launched
a multimillion-dollar legal fight to keep Democrats from changing
voting rules to enable people under 65 to vote from home, rather than
risking their health or violating stay-at-home policies by gathering at
polling places to cast ballots. (Republicans are fine with permitting
older Americans to vote by mail, recognizing that older voters skew
toward them.)
Trump
has insisted without evidence since 2016 that he lost New Hampshire
that year because of voter fraud, and that if you “deduct the millions
of people who voted illegally,” he actually won the popular vote. (Once
in office, he set up a voter fraud commission that disbanded in 2018
after finding no widespread voter fraud.) Trump has pointed to voter
fraud again this week for his opposition to mail in ballots, and has
called for voter ID, which tends to disfranchise Democrats far more than
Republicans.
The
attempt to suppress the majority in order to stay in power is more than
partisanship. It is an illustration that the leaders of today’s
Republican Party feel entitled to govern even though they are not
popular, entitled to enforce policies they know voters would reject if
they could. It also means that Republicans increasingly do not have to
answer to the people; their seats are secure.
Opposition
to this manipulation of our political system is not about electing
Democrats; it is about protecting democracy, as Michael Waldman of the
non-partisan Brennan Center wrote in USA Today on Tuesday. Using the
Trump technique of accusing an opponent of his own tricks, though, a
senior Trump campaign counsel, Justin Clark, says: “It is beyond
disgusting that the Democrats are using this crisis to try to dismantle
the integrity of our voting system…. The American people won’t stand for
this, and the campaign and the party intend to fight with them for a
free, fair, and open vote in November.”
Clark
made the news late last year when a tape leaked from a private event in
which he told Republican leaders in the key state of Wisconsin:
“Traditionally it’s always been Republicans suppressing votes in
places…. Let’s start protecting our voters. We know where they are. ...
Let’s start playing offense a little bit. That’s what you’re going to
see in 2020. It’s going to be a much bigger program, a much more
aggressive program, a much better-funded program.”
Sign up for this free newsletter at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com
——
Notes:
Trump and Ralston: https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/trump-georgia-house-speaker-turnout
“ballot integrity” https://www.nytimes.com/1986/10/25/us/gop-memo-tells-of-black-vote-cut.html
Feinstein election: https://www.nytimes.com/1994/11/30/us/lame-duck-congress-california-feinstein-opponent-hopes-uncover-ballot-fraud.html
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights: https://www.usccr.gov/pubs/vote2000/report/main.html
Trump:
Voter fraud commission: https://apnews.com/f5f6a73b2af546ee97816bb35e82c18d/Report:-Trump-commission-did-not-find-widespread-voter-fraud
Republican opposition to mail in ballots: https://www.politico.com/news/2020/04/03/trump-2020-election-legal-battle-coronavirus-162152
No comments:
Post a Comment