Check Out the Republican Party's Newest Invention
By Thom Hartmann for the Independent Media
Institute
Republicans have been committing election fraud right out in the open since 1964 and covering it up by yelling about “voter fraud.”
Remember the hours-long lines to vote we’ve seen
on TV ever since the 60s in minority neighborhoods? Those are no accident:
they’re part of a larger election fraud program the GOP has used to
suppress the vote for sixty years now.
This election year Florida Governor Ron DeSantis
is raising the stakes: he’s planning to put together a force of “election
police” under his personal command to travel the state intimidating voters
while pretending to look for “voter fraud.”
As The Washington Post reports:
“DeSantis is asking the GOP-controlled
legislature to allocate nearly $6 million to hire 52 people to ‘investigate, detect,
apprehend, and arrest anyone for an alleged violation’ of election laws. They
would be stationed at unspecified ‘field offices throughout the state’ and act
on tips from ‘government officials or any other person.’”
Meanwhile, the GOP in Texas is quietly
recruiting 10,000 white volunteers “courageous” enough to go into Black and
Hispanic polling places and confront people trying to vote. As Jessica
Corbett reported for Common Dreams:
“Common Cause Texas on Thursday shared a
leaked video of a Harris County GOP official discussing plans to
‘build an army’ of 10,000 election workers and poll watchers, including some
who ‘will have the confidence and courage’ to go into Black and Brown
communities to address alleged voter fraud that analyses show does not actually
exist.”
These efforts to intimidate voters are part of a
much larger Republican campaign of widespread and systemic election fraud
that the party has been running since the days of Barry Goldwater.
Democrats need to start calling it that.
Individual “voter fraud” doesn’t affect
elections in modern America. Every election year we hear about a handful
of people busted for trying to vote twice or in the name of a deceased
relative, but it’s so rare it has absolutely no impact on elections and hasn’t
at any point in my 70 years on this planet.
Voter fraud, in other words, isn’t real. But election fraud is very much real and alive, and that’s exactly what DeSantis and the Texas GOP are proposing, right out in the open.
This has a long history, stretching back to the
era when the Republican Party first began trying to cater to the white racist
vote.
In 1964, Senator Barry Goldwater — who was
running for President on the Republican ticket — openly opposed the Civil
Rights and the Voting Rights Acts that President Lyndon Johnson was then
pushing through Congress.
·
35.5 percent of the
citizens of Mississippi were Black but only 4.3 percent were able to register
to vote.
·
Alabama was 26% Black:
7% could vote.
·
South Carolina was
nearly one-third Black (29.2%) but only 9% of that state’s African Americans
could successfully register to vote.
·
Alabama was 26% Black
but the white power structure made sure only 7% could vote.
These were not accidents: from poll taxes to
jellybean counting to constitution-interpreting requirements, most Southern
states had erected massive barriers to Black people voting.
These elections where only white people were
allowed to vote in large numbers were fraudulent elections.
After all, isn’t it a fraud to say that a
“free and fair” election was held when, in fact, large numbers of people who
legally qualified and wanted to vote weren’t allowed their voice?
How can that not be a fraudulent
election?
And back in 1964, Goldwater and the Republicans
wanted to keep it that way.
But as the issue of voting rights was showing up
on the nightly news and people were marching across the country for their right
to vote, Republicans on Goldwater’s team realized they needed a justification
for the status quo.
So they came up with a story that they started
selling in the 1964 election through op-eds, in speeches, and on the news. This
story was simple:
There was massive “voter fraud” going on, where
mostly Black people are voting more than once in different polling places and
doing so under different names, often, as Donald Trump recently said, “by the busload”
after Sunday church services. In addition, the Republican story went, “illegal
aliens” living in the United States were voting in the millions.
None of it was true, but it became the
foundation of a nationwide voter suppression campaign that the GOP continues to
promote to this day.
A campaign of actual “election fraud” based on
the lie of “voter fraud.”
William Rehnquist, for example, was a
40-year-old Arizona lawyer and Republican activist in 1964, when his idol,
Barry Goldwater, ran against Lyndon Johnson for president.
Rehnquist helped organize a program called Operation
Eagle Eye in his state to challenge the vote of every Hispanic and Black
voter and to dramatically slow down the voting lines in communities of color to
discourage people who had to get back to work from waiting what would become
hours in line to vote.
As Democratic poll watcher Lito Pena observed at
the time, Rehnquist showed up at a southern Phoenix polling place to do his
part in Operation Eagle Eye:
“He knew the law and applied it with the
precision of a swordsman,” Pena
told a reporter. “He sat at the table at the
Bethune School, a polling place brimming with black citizens, and quizzed voters
ad nauseam about where they were from, how long they’d lived there—every
question in the book. A passage of the Constitution was read and people … were
ordered to interpret it to prove they had the language skills to vote.”
Rehnquist was richly rewarded for his activism;
he quickly rose through the GOP ranks to being appointed by President Nixon, in
1972, to the US Supreme Court, and was elevated in 1986 by President Reagan to
Chief Justice, a position he used to stop the Florida State Supreme Court-mandated
vote recount in 2000, handing the White House to George W. Bush.
(Interestingly, two then-little-known lawyers
who worked with the Bush legal team to argue before Rehnquist that the Florida
recount should be stopped were John
Roberts and Brett Kavanaugh.
Bush rewarded Roberts by putting him on the Court as Chief Justice when
Rehnquist died. Roberts was also the tie-breaking vote to allow Ohio to
continue its voter purges in 2017, and he wrote the 5–4 decision that gutted
the Voting Rights Act in Shelby County v. Holder in 2013.)
Rehnquist’s Arizona arm of Operation Eagle Eye
was one of hundreds of such formal and informal Republican voter suppression
operations that exploded across the United States that year. As The New York
Times noted on October 30, 1964:
“Republican officials have begun a massive
campaign to prevent vote fraud in the election next Tuesday, a move that has
caused Democrats to cry ‘fraud.’
“The Republican plan, Operation Eagle Eye,
is designed, according to party officials, to prevent Democrats from ‘stealing’
the 1964 election. Republicans charge that the election was stolen in 1960.
“The Democratic National Chairman, John M.
Bailey, has criticized the Republican plan as ‘a program of voter
intimidation.’ He has sent a protest to all 50 state Governors and has alerted
Democratic party officials throughout the country to be on their guard.
“’There is no doubt in my mind,’ Mr. Bailey wrote
the state chairmen yesterday, ‘that this program is a serious threat to
democracy as well as to a Democratic victory on Nov. 3rd.’”
Republican positions both then and now are not
generally popular. Who’d vote, after all, for more tax cuts for billionaires,
more pollution, banking deregulation, gutting Medicare, privatizing Social
Security, shipping jobs overseas, keeping drug prices high, and preventing
workers from forming unions?
The GOP’s sweet spot, however, is scaring white
people about “crime” by minorities, particularly African Americans and
Hispanics. Which is why Donald Trump told Congress that “three to five million fraudulent” votes were cast in
the 2016 election for Hillary Clinton.
And when they can’t clamp down enough on ID laws
or close enough polling places in Black neighborhoods, they fall back on “election
police,” the 2022 version of Operation Eagle Eye.
As the conservative Town Hall
site notes about the special election just held in Virginia that saw that
state’s governor’s office flip to a Republican:
“Not only did the RNC indeed have ‘a robust poll
watching operation,’ involving 50 election integrity trainings with over 3,200
attendees, but such an operation produced results. In the 37 [many minority]
target Virginia counties, poll watchers covered 100 percent of polling
locations, the November memo confirmed.”
This is one dimension of a much larger,
nationwide campaign of Republican voter suppression election fraud, using the
phony excuse of trying to stop “voter fraud.”
They’ve already started, in numerous states,
seizing control of election systems in minority neighborhoods, aggressively
purging voter lists, outlawing mail-in voting or making it far more difficult,
and closing polling places by the hundreds.
This year, and particularly in 2024, they’re
reviving Operation Eagle Eye to have armed militia volunteers and
“election police“ confront people in their own neighborhoods on election day,
all in a craven attempt to discourage minority voting.
Now that neither the Supreme Court nor Congress
are willing to stop them, we must, like Paul Revere, awaken the American people
to this long-term strategy that’s worked so well for the GOP since 1964,
usually producing widespread disenfranchisement and hours-long lines to vote in
minority neighborhoods.
The struggle for democracy in our republic is
far from over, and the next battlefield will be the election this November.
Republicans are doubling down on every tool they’ve ever used to suppress the
vote.
Spread the word.
Thom
Hartmann is a talk-show host and the author of The
Hidden History of American Healthcare and
more than 30+ other books in print. He is a writing fellow at the Independent Media Institute and his writings are archived at hartmannreport.com. This article was
produced by Economy for All, a project of the Independent
Media Institute.