Republicans have few concerns about
letting wealthy, influential people have their voice heard in elections. Sheldon Adelson, one of the fifteen richest
people in the world, has pledged
“limitless” donations to do “whatever it takes” to defeat President Obama.
Even though Adelson’s company
is being investigated for corruption and money-laundering, Mitt Romney has
embraced Adelson’s corrupting influence on democracy, traveling with him, and sending
Paul Ryan for a private meeting with him. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has consistently
praised the outcome of the Citizen’s United case which has encouraged this
unlimited spending, going so far as to submit a brief to the Supreme Court
arguing against overturning the decision.
What’s worse is that Republicans
want to keep these donations secret, so that we don’t know who is trying to
influence elections. The three
Republican commissioners on the Federal Election Commission have repeatedly blocked
attempts to require disclosure, specifically by tax-exempt so-called
“social welfare” organizations set up by Karl Rove and others that enable
donors to remain anonymous.
Republicans in the Senate have
repeatedly filibustered Democratic attempts to enact disclosure bills. Republican opposition to disclosure laws is
not isolated to an extreme few. In July,
not
one Senate Republican came out in support of the DISCLOSE Act. Not even John McCain, who was once a leading
proponent of campaign finance reform.
But while Republicans are strong
protectors of letting rich and influential voices be heard, they are going to
great lengths to suppress the voice of the less advantaged. These are the very Americans who mainly get
to be heard at the ballot box, because they lack the means and influence to
advocate for themselves through lobbying.
In state after state,
Republican-controlled legislatures are introducing rules to make it harder for
lower-income, minority citizens to exercise their right to vote. Their intent is obvious: to disenfranchise
voters who tend to vote Democratic. As
the Republican house majority leader in Pennsylvania said, “Voter
ID, which is gonna allow Governor Romney to win the state of Pennsylvania,
done.” Even in Connecticut, Republican Representative Livvy Floren introduced
legislation last year requiring photo IDs to vote.
Republicans contend that these
rules are necessary to protect the integrity of elections by eliminating voter
fraud. Yet there is no evidence to
support their claim that voter fraud is a real issue. In Pennsylvania, the state
admitted that there have been no prosecutions, or even investigations, of voter
impersonation that the ID law would prevent.
Between 2002 and 2005, the Justice Department prosecuted
only 26 substantiated cases of voter fraud, despite a concerted effort by
the Bush administration to vigorously prosecute voter fraud. As Fox News recently reported,
“election administrators and academics who monitor the issue said in-person
fraud is rare.”
But the evidence that these
restrictive rules will suppress the vote on a substantial scale is indisputable. The Pennsylvania Department of State estimated
that more than 759,000 registered voters might not have the identification
required by the new law. In Florida,
where a stringent registration law went into effect, the number
of newly registered Democrats dropped from over 200,000 per year prior to
2008 to just 11,365 in the past year. In
Ohio, Republicans
limited early voting in districts likely to vote Democratic, but not in those
likely to support Romney.
To protect us from isolated
cases of registration and voting irregularity, Republicans are content to potentially
disenfranchise millions of voters. The presumed impact of these
Republican-sponsored laws is not a left-wing fantasy. Federal and state courts
are taking notice, overturning discriminatory rules in Texas, Florida and
Wisconsin.
The best way to turn around this
assault on democracy is to support Democratic candidates this November. Here in
Greenwich, John Blankley, running for Representative in the Connecticut General
Assembly, has traveled to Pennsylvania to help voters contend with the new
restrictions. Chris Murphy, running for
U.S. Senate, sponsored legislation in 2008 to overturn the Department of
Veteran Affairs ban on voter registration drives enacted during the Bush
administration. Congressman Jim Himes is co-sponsoring legislation to reverse
the effects of Citizens United. Across
the board, our Democratic candidates demonstrate that they are for transparent
campaign funding, and making it easier, not harder, to cast your vote.
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