I’ve been in California this past week, mostly to participate in a small forum that filmmaker Dorothy Fadiman organized among a diverse group of election integrity activists, researchers and opinion leaders.
Columnist Bob Koehler of Tribune Media Services also participated:
From: Koehler, Bob
[mailto:BKoehler@Tribune.com]
Sent: Wednesday, March 26, 2008 2:38 PM
Subject: keep the republic
ROBERT
C. KOEHLER
For release
3/27/08
KEEP
THE REPUBLIC
By Robert C. Koehler
Tribune
Media Services
The ground feels a little
soft, but we’re going to stand it.
Premise one: Having a fair
election — all votes counted, all who are eligible and want to vote allowed to
vote — is far, far more important, even in 2008, than who wins.
Premise two: Fair elections are
not a given. They never have been, but things are worse now than ever before
because of a perfect storm, you might say, of factors that have converged in
the new millennium: officialdom’s seduction by unsafe, high-tech voting
systems; the seizure of power by a party of ruthless true believers who feel
entitled to rule and will do anything to win; a polite, confused opposition
party that won’t make a stink about raw injustice; and an arrogantly complacent
media embedded in the political and economic status quo.
The result: Benjamin Franklin’s
worst nightmare.
“Well, Doctor, what have we
got — a Republic or a Monarchy?”
“A Republic, if you can keep
it.”
As Franklin, who uttered those
words in answer to a citizen’s query as he left the final session of the
Constitutional Convention of 1787, saw with clarity, we don’t have an easy form
of government. Rather, it’s a complex, unstable yoking of disparate forces,
many with a blind urge to dominate. Only by keeping them in relative check do
we maintain our relative freedom and, most importantly, our right to
participate in our macro-destiny: that is, to have a say in, to help determine,
the country’s direction.
Without an intense degree of
citizen involvement at the structural level — down there amid the gears and
cogs of universal enfranchisement — our government will soon default to
something far simpler: one that is of, by and for whoever seizes power.
I know, just thinking about
this is terrifying. The stakes are too high. We have no context for
contemplating the possibility that the United States is anything but “the
world’s greatest democracy,” which surely explains why most of the media,
including a phalanx of progressive publications that ought to be on
hair-trigger alert about vote suppression and manipulation, have ignored or
dismissed the glaring danger signals.
These signals include, among
much else: obscenely long lines in many African-American and student precincts
on Election Day 2004; bogus voter challenges and purges; vote-flipping (“I
pressed Kerry and Bush lit up”), weird vote totals (more votes counted than
cast, undervote totals that defy common sense) and an array of other “glitches”
in precincts that use electronic voting machines; and huge discrepancies
between exit poll results and vote totals that, in other parts of the world,
would instantly cast doubt on the validity of the election.
It all comes down to the first
few words of Dorothy Fadiman’s about-to-be-released documentary, “Stealing
America: Vote by Vote,” spoken by investigative journalist Greg Palast: “The
nasty little secret of American democracy is that not all the votes get
counted.”
It has been my privilege to be
part of two new documentaries — Fadiman’s, and David Earnhardt’s “Uncounted: The
New Math of American Elections,” which is currently in theaters and available
on DVD — that focus on the disquieting irregularities (see above) of the 2004
and subsequent elections.
Both movies, by presenting the
issue in Americans’ medium of choice, and by creating a context for the
possibility of election fraud that transcends Chicken Little and reminds
viewers of our nation’s long history of citizen struggle and vigilance, raise
the hope that today’s crisis will resonate with a large segment of the public
and lead to widespread anger and awareness . . . and maybe something that doesn’t
go away. A demand for paper ballots, perhaps. A citizens’ movement.
Recognizing and capturing that
“something” was, I think, the unstated goal of a recent two-day brainstorming
session I attended in Palo Alto,
Calif., that Fadiman organized
among people long involved in the issue.
After a lot of anguished
back-and-forth, we came out of it with a mission statement that was almost
Zenlike in its quiet resonance: To encourage citizen ownership of
transparent, participatory democracy.
The vision here, coiled in
each word, is of a nation full of election monitors, demanding answers,
standing tough when they are rebuffed or told, no, this information is not
public (computer voting-machine source codes, exit poll data); or no, the
public isn’t allowed here (vote-count premises); or sorry, we didn’t anticipate
such a large turnout (not enough voting machines, not enough ballots).
“This really is the serious
business of our lives,” said Ion Sancho, election supervisor of Leon County,
Fla., a fair-elections hero and one of the participants. “My goal is waking
people up. My tactic is to put myself in the middle of the road and say” — to
anyone who would suppress or interfere with the vote — “hey, you’re going to
have to hit me.”
These are just words unless
you sign on with your life.
- - -
Robert Koehler, an award-winning, Chicago-based
journalist, is an editor at Tribune Media Services and nationally syndicated
writer. You can respond to this column at bkoehler@tribune.com or visit his Web site at commonwonders.com.
© 2008 Tribune Media
Services, Inc.