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A Weblog of Centrist Voices in American Politics |
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October 22, 2004RIGHTS VS RESPONSIBILITYLike Dave Barry said, "Let's Face It. NOBODY is Normal," we have to face it: We well NEVER have a perfect national election. With over 100 million people voting in just as many different processes, it's just never going to happen. Not to say that what happened in 2000 is acceptable or any of this reported voter intimidation should be ignored, but let's get rid of the idea that this is all a result of disenfranchisement or racism. Hello! It's the U.S. Government folks - not the bastion of efficiency. Not to mention the fact that a lot of the problems encountered in 2000 and likely to be encountered this year weren't about victimization at all. It was about voters not doing what they should have done. George Will of the Washington Post wrote a good article this week on all the talk about reckless accusations but no talk about what voter's responsiblities beyond showing up. COMMENTARY: Obsessive about rights, blind to responsibilities WASHINGTON — The campaign is culminating with reckless charges about the possibility — actually, the certainty; such is life — that there will be imperfections in recording perhaps 110 million votes. The charges are couched in the language of liberalism: much talk about voters' rights, no talk about voters' responsibilities, and dark warnings of victimization — "disenfranchisement" and "intimidation." Consider punch-card voting systems, and "overvotes" and "undervotes." Overvoting occurs when voters mark their ballots for two candidates for a single office. Undervoting occurs when voters do not mark a choice among the candidates for an office. Only 12.4 percent of America's registered voters live in jurisdictions that use punch-card systems of the sort that Florida made infamous in 2000. But 72 percent of Ohioans do. Last Sunday The Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch reported, beneath the headline "Punch Cards May Hurt Blacks," that such ballots cast with no vote recorded for president were in 2000 a higher percentage in black communities (5 percent) than in other communities (under 2 percent). The state is being sued about "racial disparities" resulting from punch-card voting in three counties. However, The Dispatch reports several scholars' assertions that race is not the salient variable. Higher levels of unrecorded presidential preferences supposedly correlate with low levels of income and education, appearing also in the predominantly white Appalachian counties of southeastern Ohio. Punch cards, The Dispatch says, are "prone" to overvotes and undervotes "because so many things can go wrong." For example, if "voters do not correctly insert the card into the voting device, the wrong holes can be punched." But is it unreasonable to expect voters to perform those simple manipulations? Are they victims — disenfranchised — if they do not? Surely not in Ohio, where printed guides to punch-card voting are supplemented by instructional videos on the Internet, and where instructions and instructors will be available at polling places. Granted, punch-card systems, like everything else in life, are not infallible. They can — remember Florida's hanging and dimpled (aka pregnant) chads? — inadequately record the intent of a voter, particularly one who is careless about the task of handling the simple punch-card mechanism. But how can punch cards be blamed for overvotes? And how does invalidating such a vote constitute, as is now commonly said, "disenfranchisement"? When poll taxes, meretricious literacy tests, hostile sheriffs and mobs stood between blacks and ballots, blacks were disenfranchised. To be disenfranchised is to have something done to you, not to do something to yourself. Regarding undervotes, voters can always check to make sure they have clearly punched holes. Furthermore, they have a right — and are often right to exercise the right — to undervote by skipping certain choices on the ballot. In some Florida jurisdictions this year, electronic touch-screen voting machines will react irritably to undervotes. If a voter skips a choice on the ballot, a message — e.g., "You have not made a choice on this race" — appears on the screen three times. What more must be done to deal with the undervote problem — which often is not a problem but a sensible preference? Should there be more severe prompts? The first might be: "I'm just a machine, but shouldn't you be marking more boxes?" The second might be: "Hey, dolt — yes, you: The right to vote is precious, so even though you neither know nor care about a particular contest on the ballot, vote for someone — anyone — even if your vote is random." Finally, the machine could threaten: "Cast more votes or you will wake up with a horse's head in your bed." Would such growls from voting machines satisfy liberals that an undervote need not represent either a remediable flaw in the voter or in the technology? Can liberals accept that an undervote usually reflects either voter carelessness, for which the voter suffers the condign punishment of an unrecorded preference, or it reflects the voter's choice not to express a preference? No, otherwise they would not be liberals, obsessive about rights, blind to responsibilities. On Monday a Colorado judge upheld a new requirement that voters are responsible for producing identification before being allowed to vote. And Florida's Supreme Court rejected the argument that voters are disenfranchised by not counting provisional ballots they cast in the wrong precincts. Imagine that: Voters are responsible for proving who they are and knowing where they are supposed to vote. There will be charges that both rulings permit "intimidation," which in today's liberal lexicon is a synonym for linking rights to responsibilities. Comments
I remember thinking during the 2000 Florida "butterfly ballot" fiasco that what the Gore camp was arguing was that since so many of their people were too stupid to vote correctly, they should get a do-over after the polls closed...but had the numbers been the other way, they would have fought against do-overs tooth and nail. It's up to you to know the rules, not up to the election commission to spoon-feed you. Voting will never be perfect. Nor will voters. Hey, this is America! We have a right to be stupid and screw up own votes! Posted by: Tully at October 22, 2004 11:41 AMGeorge Will is right on target. I personally view Florida 2000 as a national embarrassment for many reasons. But, four years later there is not one verifiable case of voter intimidation or racism in regard to this debacle. So, instead of using the grass roots effort to truly educate voters so that they make informed choices, I'm seeing scare tactics and legal maneuvering. I think it's distasteful and insulting. Being a native Floridian, I bet Florida residents feel the same way too. Posted by: Jamie at October 22, 2004 01:11 PMOf course voting is not perfect. But the goal is not for voting for to be perfect -- the goal is to keep error rates (i) as low as reasonably possible, and (ii) consistent. If you stick the error-prone systems in poor areas, or Republican areas, or Democratic areas, it is unfair. (Whether or not it's illegal or unconstutional is another matter.) The voters who screwed up the butterfly ballot were no stupider than the average population. It was a crappy design, which led to an abnormally high error rate. Folks, my father was probably the only old Jew in Florida who MEANT to vote for Buchanan. The butterfly design came from a Dem official, not a Republican, so we can probably rule out malicious intent, but it still ought to bother people. Yes, every individual is responsible for voting properly. But the people who design and implement the voting system are responsible too. (Contra to my own argument -- by having such a wide variety of voting systems, we make it harded to manipulate the entire system.) Posted by: Oberon at October 22, 2004 02:46 PMOberon, IMHO the right to be stupid extends to election commissioners as well, and knows no partisan bounds.... Posted by: Tully at October 22, 2004 04:24 PMHeh. Posted by: Oberon at October 22, 2004 04:36 PMKeep the pressure on the election officials. Perhaps that way there will be no successful vote supression-by-intimidation. Angela, Great post. I agree and it's sad to see Democrats (of which I consider myself one) falling into the trap of irresponsibly using racism as a political tool. When you do that, it's like the little boy who shouted "Wolf"; no one believes you when it actually exists. Last night on CSPAN, I heard the writer Cynthia Ozick make a comment to the effect that she does not consider anti-semitism to be a political issue because a political issue has two sides. I think the same thing about racism in general; it's too important to use for partisan political purposes. Posted by: MWS at October 25, 2004 10:43 AM |
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