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Voter
Suppression
Laws
Cast
Chill on
Af-Am
Community
By
Khalil
Abdullah,
New
America
Media,
News
Posted:
Oct 24,
2012
SAN
FRANCISCO
(NAM) -
As voter
suppression
laws
continue
to be
debated
in
states
across
the
country,
members
of the
African-American
press
and
voting
rights
advocates
say the
repercussions
of that
debate
are
already
being
felt.
The most
immediate
metric,
they
note,
will be
whether
voter
turnout
is
reduced.
For some
observers,
that is
a likely
prospect.
“Talking
about
the guys
who are
not
going to
vote,
four
years
ago,
they
took
chances,”
said
Harold
Meeks,
publisher
of the
Tell Us
USA News
Network,
an
on-line
news
magazine
with
bureaus
in
several
cities.
“I owe
$23,000
in child
support,
but I’m
going
out to
vote for
the
black
man,”
Meeks
said,
describing
a
hypothetical
Detroit
voter in
2008.
“They’re
not
going to
take
those
same
chances
again,
particularly
with
these
other
voices
saying
that
we’re
going to
scrutinize
you,” he
continued.
“We’re
going to
see if
there
are any
warrants
out for
you, so
don’t
you dare
register.
It’s
that
intimidation
factor,
it’s
real.”
Meeks
acknowledged
that
restrictive
laws in
several
states
have
been
rescinded
but
feels
those
who
sponsored
them
“have
got
their
point
across”
and
that, in
a tight
election,
those
absent
votes
could
weigh on
the
outcome.
Court
victories
– most
recently
in South
Carolina
and
Pennsylvania
– have
dispensed
with the
need for
photo
IDs in
this
year’s
election.
Still,
the
furor
over
that
issue,
and the
repeated
attempts
at
totally
repealing
early
voting
only
recently
stymied
in Ohio,
for
example,
and
efforts
to purge
voting
rolls
and
curtail
registration
periods,
have
engendered
a
spectrum
of
responses.
Misinformation
in
Minnesota
Charles
Hallman,
staff
writer
for the
Minnesota
Spokesman-Recorder
in
Minneapolis
said
what he
fears
most is
misinformation.
“E-mails
have
been
sent out
to
churches
telling
them
that
their
parishioners
might
not be
eligible
to vote
this
year
even
though
there
have
been no
changes
in the
registration
forms,”
he said.
Hallman
has
taken it
upon
himself
to tell
ministers
to keep
the
correct
information
in the
pulpit
and has
encouraged
them to
urge
parishioners
to check
with the
secretary
of
state’s
office
if they
have
questions
regarding
eligibility.
He added
that his
paper’s
publisher
and
staff
have
been
consistent
in
running
stories
and
weekly
updates
on why
voting
matters.
“It’s
not just
about
the
presidential
election.”
In
November,
Minnesota
citizens
will be
voting
on two
hotly
contested
ballot
initiatives
to amend
the
state’s
constitution.
One
would
legally
define
marriage
as
between
one man
and one
woman;
the
other
would
require
a photo
ID for
future
elections.
Hallman
said his
paper
has been
neutral
on the
marriage
amendment.
On the
photo ID
law, he
says
passage
would
negatively
and
disproportionately
affect a
wide
swath of
citizens.
“That’s
Native
Americans,
that’s
blacks,
that’s
Latinos,”
Hallman
said,
pointing
to a
report
showing
that
thousands
of
Minnesotans
lack the
photo ID
required
under
the
amendment.
He
contends
the
photo ID
amendment
is a
GOP-sponsored
strategy
to limit
the
number
of
Democratic
voters –
African-Americans
among
them.
And
though
Minnesota
is
considered
a blue
state,
he said,
voter
attrition
through
whatever
method
has
electoral
consequences.
“We
don’t
have a
big
turnout
of black
people
who come
out to
vote for
a number
of
reasons,”
Hallman
explained,
noting
that
their
relatively
low
participation
in the
2010
election
was
likely a
factor
in
Republicans
gaining
control
of the
state’s
legislature.
Young
Voters
in Old
Dominion
While a
low
turnout
of
African-Americans
in
Minnesota
might
not lose
the Oval
Office
for the
Democratic
Party,
it
certainly
could in
Virginia.
With 13
electoral
votes at
stake,
both
parties
are
aggressively
courting
Old
Dominion
voters.
Virginia
enacted
a voter
photo ID
law this
year,
one
considered
by both
supporters
and
detractors
as
having
the
least
onerous
requirements
among
laws of
its
type.
For
Foster
Stringer,
who has
spent
time
visiting
schools
as part
of a
broad-based
voter
registration
drive
spearheaded
by the
National
Coalition
on Black
Civic
Participation,
how the
state’s
young
voters
will
respond
has yet
to be
answered.
“These
were
majority
black
and
Hispanic
kids,
very few
white
children
in these
schools,”
said
Stringer,
who
recently
retired
as
Director
of Human
and
Civil
Rights
for the
American
Federation
of
Teachers.
He said
that
even
before
the
second
presidential
debate,
“there
would be
this
interest
in
talking
about
the
election.
‘We
gotta be
talking
about
Pell
grants
and
student
loans. I
want to
go to
college,
but I
don’t
want to
get
saddled
with all
that
debt.’”
Stringer
said he
had not
anticipated
their
interest.
“After
all the
negative
talk we
hear
about a
lost
generation
of
African-American
youth, I
was
surprised.
It was
very
encouraging
for me.”
He
attributes
that
enthusiasm,
in part,
to the
2008
election
of
President
Obama.
“Some of
these
kids
were 13
when
Obama
was
elected
and now
they’re
at an
age
where
they
want to
be
responsible.”
He said
the
speculation
that an
African-American
president
would
manifest
in
unexpected
ways is
being
borne
out.
In
New
Orleans,
Poverty
is
Suppression
The
picture
in New
Orleans
appears
less
bright
for
David
Baker,
associate
editor
for the
Louisiana
Weekly.
He says
he’s yet
to see
the kind
of
eagerness
to
register
described
by
Stringer.
“I
haven’t
seen as
many 18
or
19-year-olds
registering
voters
outside
of
grocery
stores …
like
during
the last
election.”
He said
he is
aware
that
there
were
ongoing
voter
registration
campaigns
in the
city,
but
added,
“New
Orleans
has been
mired in
crime,
violent
murder
crime. A
lot of
people’s
focus
has been
on that
issue.”
Baker
also
expressed
disappointment
in the
failure
of both
candidates
to draw
clear
lines
around
what
middle
class
means
for
different
communities.
That
Obama
and
Romney
would
consider
a person
in the
African-American
community
who even
neared
earning
the
$200,000
to
$250,000
cap they
cite as
being
middle
class is
not
grounded
in the
reality
of
American
life, he
said.
Poverty,
Baker
insisted,
is the
ultimate
voter
suppression
issue.
Not only
does it
impose
its own
limits
on civic
participation,
but its
absence
in
policy
discussions
erodes
confidence
in
America’s
future.
“I don’t
see
poverty
being
debated.
That’s
the
problem
that
continues
to be
unaddressed.”
Baker
said. “I
actually
heard my
grandmother
talk
about
the
importance
of
voting,
but then
she’ll
say, ‘No
matter
who wins
the
election,
I’m
still
going to
be
poor.’”
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