The Fraudulent Meaning of Elections
by
James Bovard
by James Bovard
Politicians
strive to make Americans view elections as sacrosanct. Challenges
to election results are portrayed as heresies that threaten to destroy
the entire republic. After the 2004 presidential election, many
Democrats went on the warpath over alleged voter fraud and manipulation
in Ohio and elsewhere. The Constitution requires Congress to certify
the Electoral College voters for each state before a president is
officially elected. A handful of Democratic members of Congress
formally challenged the seating of the Ohio electors when Congress
reconvened in early January 2005. Though the debate in the House
of Representatives lasted barely two hours, many Republicans feared
that raising the topic had derailed the nation and the march of
history.
Rep. Stephanie
Tubbs Jones (D-Ohio) explained the purpose of the Democratic challenge:
This objection does not have at its root the hope or even the hint
of overturning the victory of the President; but ... we as a body
must conduct a formal and legitimate debate about election irregularities.
I raise this objection to debate the process and protect the integrity
of the true will of the people.
Tubbs Jones,
like Republicans who made similar invocations that day, did not
define the true will of the people. She deftly removed
any doubts about the wisdom of the challenge: While some have
called our cause foolish, I can assure you that my parents, Mary
and Andrew Tubbs, did not raise any fools.
Many Democrats
were wary of possible shenanigans from computerized systems. Rep.
Maxine Waters (D-Cal.) complained that many states used more
sophisticated technology for lottery tickets than for elections:
Incredibly even in those few jurisdictions that have moved to electronic
voting ... we do not require a verifiable paper trail to protect
against vote tampering. If an ATM machine can give each user a receipt
that that user can rely upon, then a voting machine should also
be able to give a receipt.
But while
local and state governments around the nation had ample funds to
pay for sports stadiums and foreign jaunts for governors and their
aides, they claimed poverty when it came to validating voting.
Congressional
responses
Republicans
went ballistic at the challenge. Rep. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) declared,
This is not the time, ladies and gentlemen, to obstruct the
will of the American people. Rep. David Hobson (R-Ohio) bewailed
that this is, in all the years I have been in politics, one
of the most base, outrageous acts to take place.
Rep. Roy Blunt
(R-Mo.), the House majority whip, declared, We also need to
understand that every time we attack the process, we cast that doubt
on that fabric of democracy that is so important. Blunt did
not specify if the fabric was a cover sheet. He sought
to put the entire government above questioning:
It is the greatest democracy in the history of the world and it
is run by people who step forward and make a system work in ways
that nobody would believe until they see it produce the result of
what people want to have happen on Election Day.
And anyone
who doubted the result was an enemy of democracy.
Rep. J.D.
Hayworth (R-Ariz.) commented,
The problem we confront with this debate is that it serves to plant
the insidious seeds of doubt in the electoral process. But to disrupt
the Electoral College, to say in effect, hey, we just want to shine
light on this problem, is not the proper use of the peoples
time.
Invoking the
peoples time implies that every moment that the congressmen
were on the floor was sacred. But if the peoples time is so
sacred, why did most House members leave town immediately after
this vote and not return for almost two weeks? (These were the first
of more than 15 weeks of paid vacation they were scheduled to receive
in 2005.)
Similarly,
Rep. Steve Chabot (R-Ohio) declaimed,
This is nothing more or less than an attempt to sow doubt on the
legitimacy of this President. It is an attempt to weaken President
Bush, and it is unfortunate because we have much work to do in this
House and in the Senate, putting this country on the right track.
Chabots
complaint implied that Congress was on the verge of fixing the nations
ills. The debate did not displace any substantive legislative work
scheduled for that day. At the worst, it may have delayed members
arriving at donors receptions or catching planes out of Washington
after another grueling three-day work week.
Democrats
who questioned the election results automatically became terrorist
supporters or at least sympathizers. Rep. David Dreier (R-Calif.),
chairman of the House Rules Committee, proclaimed,
We are in the midst of a global war on terrorism and the people
who are leading that war on terrorism clearly have no confidence
whatsoever in the process of self-determination. And that is why
I think that this exercise which we are going through today clearly
emboldens those who would, in fact, want to undermine the prospect
of democracy.
Dreier did
not specify how many thousands of people around the world would
perish as a result of the Democratic maneuver. He warned,
It has been said that democracy still represents the best hope for
mankind. Sowing seeds of doubt about a legitimately decided election
threatens to unnecessarily dim that hope.
Merely questioning
some procedures in one election could doom mankind to perpetual
tyranny.
Rep. Tom Price
(R-Ga.) lamented,
Political grandstanding during this vital Electoral College ballot
count is shameful and reprehensible.... To raise an objection for
which many speakers on the other side have said they will oppose
only feeds unfounded discontent in the veracity of our great democracy.
Price did
not explain how simply raising questions suddenly can make democracy
dishonest. The election results must be above reproach not because
there was no funny business but because no one should be permitted
to question them.
The House
majority leader, Tom DeLay (R-Tex.), who was recently indicted on
multiple criminal charges, put the Democrats motion in perspective:
It is an assault against the institutions of our representative
democracy. It is a threat to the very ideals it ostensibly defends....
It is a crime against the dignity of American democracy, and that
crime is not victimless.
DeLay declared
that the Democrats complaints poison our democratic
processes. (On the other hand, the three censures that DeLay
received from the House Ethics Committee were a healthy tonic for
popular government.)
People are
supposed to believe that regardless of how many fabrications are
told on the campaign trail, the election itself is sacrosanct
even though politicians and political appointees are ultimately
in charge of counting the votes. Even though the co-chairman of
the Bush reelection campaign in Ohio happened to be the same person
in charge of vote counting in Ohio Secretary of State Kenneth
Blackwell any suspicion of wrongdoing was scurrilous.
What senior
members of the House of Representatives saw as a grave threat to
democracy and the future of humanity failed to hold the attention
of the U.S. Senate. The Senate held no debate over the objection.
Instead, a handful of senators stood up and made brief comments
to the TV cameras and a largely empty floor. Twenty-five senators
did not even bother voting on the challenge to the Ohio electors.
Sen. George
Voinovich (R-Ohio) vindicated his home state:
As a Republican from Cleveland who has been reelected as a Republican
from Cleveland, elected to Federal, State, county, and municipal
offices, I am living proof Ohioans know how to count ballots and,
more importantly, we count fairly.
Voinovich
assumed that since it was well known, if not universally admitted,
that he was beyond reproach, his election victories proved that
all Ohio elections are impeccable.
Sen. Mitch
McConnell, the second-ranking Republican in the Senate and a man
renowned for aggressive fundraising practices, was the designated
Wailer in the Senate. He denounced the Democrats:
They should not trample on the proud republican government our Founding
Fathers bequeathed us. They should not mock the beautiful concept
that sovereignty lies with the people, while our troops are fighting
and dying to plant that concept in the soil of Iraq.
Such
blather should not be dismissed as merely self-serving emissions.
These comments go to the heart of how politicians think about government
and their own power and about citizens duty to accept
unquestioningly whatever election results the politicians proclaim.
Citizens are supposed to believe in that magical moment of uplift
that occurs when election results are officially certified
expunging all the verbal flim-flams of the campaign itself. The
Republicans comments sounded as if there is a grave danger
in letting people even start to think about how the whole process
works as if Republicans were terrified of any questions or
challenges that would decrease peoples submissiveness to the
government.
The
debate in Congress illustrated how elections are now
about consecration, rather than representation. Elections have become
something for rulers to shroud themselves in, rather than leashes
used by the people. Politicians are obsessed with maintaining the
imagined dignity of their class, not in resolving doubts about honest
vote counting.
July
11, 2006
James Bovard
[send him mail] is the author
of the just-released Attention
Deficit Democracy, The
Bush Betrayal, and Terrorism
& Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice, and Peace to Rid the
World of Evil. He serves as a policy advisor for The
Future of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright ©
2006 The Future of Freedom Foundation
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