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Departments
Campaign 2004
http://www.freepress.org/departments/display/19/2004/899
by Steven Rosenfeld
November 20, 2004
Ohio’s 2004 presidential vote will be challenged as soon as next week
in the state Supreme Court, a coalition of public-interest lawyers
announced Friday.
The lawyers have taken sworn testimony from hundreds of people in
hearings in Columbus and Cincinnati, and will use excerpts as well as
documents obtained from county election officials and Election Day exit
polls to make a case that thousands of votes were incorrectly counted
or not counted on Election Day.
“The objective is to get to the truth,” said Columbus Ohio lawyer Cliff
Arnebeck, coordinator of the Ohio Honest Elections Campaign. “What’s
critically important, whether it’s President Bush or Sen. Kerry,
whoever’s been elected actually elected, is to know you won by an
honest election. So it’s in the interest of both sides as American
citizens to know the truth and have this answered.”
The challenge comes as the Green Party has plans to file for a recount
of the state’s 2004 presidential vote. The Green Party and the Ohio
Honest Elections Campaign both believe the unofficial results announced
on Election Day were wrong. Ohio Secretary of State Ken Blackwell has
not yet certified the Nov. 2 vote. The state’s election law says an
election challenge must show the wrong candidate was been declared the
winner, or it can be dismissed without a hearing. The state Supreme
Court’s chief justice hears the case.
The Ohio Republican Party dismissed the challenge on Friday, the
Associated Press reported, but the coalition announcing it said they
were ready to litigate.
“The sworn statements that we’ve received should give everyone cause to
go forward in terms of this inquiry,” said Robert Fitrakis, a lawyer,
political science professor at Columbus State Community College, and
editor at www.freepress.org,
at the announcement.
The ‘Ohio Honest Election Campaign' is a coalition of public-interest
groups and citizens interested in free and fair elections. The three
lawyers announcing the challenge are associated with a variety of
established groups. Arnebeck is the counsel for Common Cause’s Ohio
chapter and The Alliance for Democracy. Attorney Susan Truitt is with
Citizens Alliance for Secure Elections-Ohio, www.caseohio.org.
The boards of groups have not yet formally endorsed the election
challenge but are expected to do so in coming days.
The Honest Election campaign is part of a populist groundswell to
safeguard voting rights. The 2004 campaign saw the most new voters in a
generation. Even though Kerry conceded on Nov. 3, many people were not
satisfied with national media explanations of the Ohio vote.
Scientifically designed nonpartisan exit polls taken during the day
showed a different result from the result reported that night, when
George W. Bush was declared the victor.
Moreover, on Election Day there were long lines and widespread accounts
of people who did not get to vote in urban Democratic-leaning precincts
across the state. These factors and other reports of voter frustration,
computerized voting miscounts and still-changing provisional ballot
counting rules left many doubts about the unofficial vote count and
George W. Bush’s 130,000 vote margin.
Those concerns coalesced into a grassroots campaign for an answer.
Within two weeks following Election Day, Arnebeck had talked to the
Green and Libertarian Parties about filing for a recount – if the funds
could be raised. The Greens and the Honest Election Campaign started
fundraising the same day, and in less than a week, the Greens had
raised $150,000 via their website to file for the recount. The Ohio
Honest Election Campaign raised about $90,000 via the Alliance for
Democracy site, after two Air America Radio hosts, Laura Flanders and
Randi Rhodes, embraced the cause and talked up the campaign.
Meanwhile, FreePress.org’s Bob Fitrakis inspired Amy Kaplan and
Jonathan Meier, two young members of the League of Pissed-Off Voters’
Ohio chapter (www.indyvoter.org)
to organize public hearings to gather testimony under oath of the
people who saw or experienced what they thought was voter suppression
or intimidation. Such intentional acts would violate the federal Voting
Rights Act. Two hearings were held in Columbus and hundreds of people
showed up and testified. Then activists in Cincinnati and Cleveland
organized hearings.
At these hearings, scores of people said too few voting machines were
put in Democratic-leaning inner-city precincts, creating long lines and
deterring many people from voting. In contrast, Republican-leaning
suburbs had plenty of voting machines and did not have the long lines.
There were also reports of miscounts by computer voting machines, as
well as errors registering the wrong candidate for president. Minority
voters also spoke of disproportionately getting provisional ballots,
including long-time residents.
Early in the weeks those hearings were being held, the Green and
Libertarian Parties announced they would seek a statewide recount. By
week’s end, the Honest Election Campaign announced its intention to
challenge presidential election result at the Ohio Supreme Court.
Others lawsuits may be announced next week, Arnebeck said, because
there is limited time to hold a meaningful recount and to address
election irregularities before the Electoral College meets in
December.
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Steven Rosenfeld is senior producer of The Laura Flanders Show on Air
America Radio.
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