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Released January
9, 2001
Contact:
Manning Marable
BRC National Co-Chair
mm247@columbia.edu
212-854-1489 or 212-854-7010
The biggest
loser in the presidential election of November, 2000 was the principle
of democracy. The electoral contest between the two major candidates of
the capitalist parties, George W. Bush and Al Gore, was essentially decided
not by the people, but by the Republican-controlled Florida State Legislature
and by five conservative justices on the U.S. Supreme Court. In effect,
Gore was elected by the voters, while Bush was selected by the courts.
Evidence of massive voter fraud and the deliberate disenfranchisement
of Black voters continues to mount. Hundreds of African-American voters
were turned away at various polling places, when sheriff's deputies checking
voter IDs falsely asserted that the race indicated on the card did not
match the race of the person trying to vote. In predominantly Black Florida
precincts, roadblocks were setup only a few hundred yards from voting
places, where police demanded that African Americans get out of their
automobiles and show identification. Over 8,000 voters in Florida were
denied the right to cast ballots because they were erroneously listed
as ex-felons, who are not permitted to vote in that state. In at least
four minority schools in Miami that had been used as polling places, ballot
boxes full of votes were left behind, and only discovered by school employees
a day after the election. Similar instances of Republican inspired voter
irregularities and "dirty tricks" once made infamous by the
Nixon administration have also been documented. In Michigan, Virginia,
and Florida, for example, thousands of black households received telephone
calls the weekend before the election from people claiming to represent
the NAACP, urging them to vote for George W. Bush. Since the NAACP is
officially nonpartisan, such calls obviously were orchestrated by the
Bush campaign.
Despite such illegal tactics and widespread racial disenfranchisement,
African Americans turned out to vote against the Republican agenda in
record numbers. Black voters supported Gore over Bush by 90 to 8 percent.
Bush's dismal performance with African-American voters was the worst in
recent history, with the sole exception of Barry Goldwater's puny 6 percent
of the Black vote back in 1964.And African-American voters in Texas, the
Black folk who knew Bush better than anybody else, gave their governor
only 5 percent of their votes.
In many states, African Americans were the core constituency that led
successful struggles to defeat conservative Republicans. Whites nationwide
favored Bush over Gore by 53 to 42 percent, and generally voted for Republicans
in senatorial and gubernatorial races.
But in race after race, Blacks represented the critical margin of victory.
In Maryland, for example, white voters favored Bush over Gore by 51 to
45 percent. But Black voters endorsed Gore by 90 percent, and their overall
turnout surged to 22 percent of Maryland's total vote. With this crucial
Black support, Gore won easily by 17 percent. The identical pattern occurred
in Michigan, where whites supported Bush 51 to 46 percent, but African
Americans endorsed Gore by 90 percent, thus giving the state to the Democrats.
In Florida alone, African-American turnout increased from 527,000 in 1996
to 952,000 in 2000.
From the vantage point of Black radicalism, this remarkable political
response by the African-American community in the 2000 elections did not
represent an endorsement of the political agenda of "New Democrats"
like Al Gore and Joe Lieberman. It was not a sign of approval for the
devastating policies of the Clinton administration, such as the 1996 Welfare
Act. It was the unambiguous and clearly recognized act of self-interest
and self-preservation. It was the defeat of the politics we oppose the
most, rather than the triumph of the politics which we truly want. Black
people understood that the parade of black and brown faces at the Republican
convention last summer was a farce, the "illusion of inclusion."
Most knew that Bush opposes affirmative action, and presides over a state
that has a minimum wage of only $3.15 an hour. They knew that he had picked
a running mate who had voted against releasing Nelson Mandela from prison,
and who had opposed sanctions against apartheid. The Republican ticket
was the symbolic party of white supremacy, and that's why millions of
our people waited patiently on long lines, from St. Louis to Harlem, from
Jacksonville to Oakland, to vote our own interests.
In an honest election, the Right would have been easily defeated. But
because we do not live in a genuine democracy, the minority reflecting
the interests and "lifestyles of the rich and shameless" used
the courts to steal the election. Nationwide, 4.2 million American citizens,
including 1.8 million African Americans, have been disenfranchised for
life due to prior felony convictions. Institutional barriers and electoral
restrictions make it difficult for millions of other citizens to vote.
Several million ballots are routinely discarded, not counted or even destroyed
in presidential contests, and the media and major capitalist parties do
virtually nothing about it. Our winner- take-all election system makes
it virtually impossible for third parties that reflect the real interests
of African Americans, Latinos, working class and poor people to have any
meaningful impact on national and Congressional races.
For these reasons, the Black Radical Congress believes that the Black
Freedom Movement and our progressive allies must ground our political
struggle against the illegitimate Bush regime around the fight for democracy.
This is the fundamental political division that confronts the American
people. The Far Right and the corporations hate and fear real democracy.
This is why there remain so many institutional barriers to ballot access,
and the undemocratic disenfranchisement of millions of poor and minority
voters.
The Black Radical Congress endorses and supports efforts by organizations
such as the Independent Progressive Politics Network to promote a "Voters'
Bill of Rights," and a national campaign for democracy. Our first
demand in such a campaign must be the strong enforcement of the Voting
Rights Act. Section Two of that Act makes it illegal for any state or
local government to use election procedures that in effect disenfranchise
racial or ethnic minority voters. The provisions of the Voting Rights
Act that require federal observers and complaints examiners to investigate
widespread cases of racist voter fraud should be immediately instituted
in Florida and other states. Local elections officials who have been found
to intimidate and exclude Black voters must be vigorously prosecuted.
The Black Radical Congress calls for a ban on all "soft money"
contributions in elections, the billions of dollars that routinely control
the outcomes in most races. We support the extension of full voting rights
to every citizen-to every prisoner currently incarcerated, and to all
ex-felons. We believe that voting should be made much easier. Moving elections
to weekends or making them national holidays would encourage greater voter
participation. State laws should be liberalized to permit smaller Third
Parties to gain ballot access. We also need to move away from the anti-democratic
winner-take-all system toward the goal of proportional representation
voting. The only way that minority groups will gain their fair share of
seats in a city council, state legislature or in Congress is through some
form of proportional voting.
The Black Radical Congress believes that the most blatant and indefensible
violation of democracy in the U.S. today is represented by Washington,
D.C. The District of Columbia has more voters than several states, but
has no voting representation in Congress. We say D.C. must have complete
home rule and statehood!
The Black Radical Congress joins with other progressive organizations,
including all racial, ethnic, gender and class groups, who are committed
to the struggle for democracy. The time for action is now. We must demonstrate
in Washington, D.C. on January 20th, to tell the world that Black America
will not tolerate the dismantling of our hard-fought democratic rights.
The BRC declares that the Bush regime is illegal, fraudulent, and based
on the rampant racist exclusion of millions of Black voters. We are committed
to building a broad-based pro-democracy movement that has the capacity
to achieve real democracy in the U.S.
Black
Radical Congress
National Office
Columbia University Station
P.O. Box 250791
New York, NY 10025-1509
Phone: (212) 969-0348
blackradicalcongress@email.com
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