[EL] “‘Stop the Steal’ Didn’t Start With Trump"
Braden Boucek
braden at beacontn.org
Sun Jan 17 15:05:53 PST 2021
In 2005, I was living in Memphis, TN, working as a federal prosecutor for
the United States Dept. of Justice. At that time, Ophelia Ford won a
special election for a seat recently vacated by John Ford, a funeral
director by trade, and who had stepped down after being indicted for public
corruption, a crime of which he was ultimately convicted. She defeated her
republican opponent by 13 votes. Dead people, felons, persons registered to
vacant lots and persons out of the district were all
<https://web.archive.org/web/20060723210829/http://www.commercialappeal.com/mca/local/article/0,2845,MCA_25340_4792646,00.html>
on the rolls. The state ultimately voided the election, a result authorized
by then District Court Judge Bernice Donald (a Clinton appointee later
elevated to the Sixth Circuit by President Obama, and an otherwise
excellent judge in my personal experience). The state later issued 37
indictments, including 3 of poll workers for faking votes for Ophelia Ford.*
However much Bouie or other commentators may hold to the view that voter
fraud is fake, reality says differently.
*Ford herself was never charged with wrongdoing.
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On Sun, Jan 17, 2021 at 2:50 PM Paul Gronke <paul.gronke at gmail.com> wrote:
> Doug
>
> I really liked that column as well. I don’t pretend that Janelle Bouie
> reads my tweets, but I’ve been trying to remind folks about the Jim
> Rutenberg story in the Times magazine, “The Attack on Voting” (9/20/2020).
> https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/30/magazine/trump-voter-fraud.html It
> does a comprehensive job detailing a two decade long effort to create a
> voter fraud narrative. I hope more and more opinion leaders realize this,
> and don’t think that this is just a Trump phenomenon.
>
> Fake charges of election malfeasance as a political strategy needs to
> stop, or at least be exposed for what it is: a crass, corrosive, and deeply
> damaging to our democratic system. I may be too optimistic to hope that
> demographic shifts in the country and focused mobilization efforts will
> ultimately turn the GOP away from this strategy, but regardless it’s going
> to be a difficult transition.
>
> Some under 50 may not remember Kevin Phillips — he worked on the Nixon
> campaign in 1968, and his work there and subsequent book, *The Emerging
> Republican Majority, *are often pointed to as key moments in the
> emergence of the “Southern Strategy.” Today we call it by it’s real name:
> white identify politics / white supremacy politics, reaching far beyond the
> Southern states.
> ---
> Paul Gronke
> Professor, Reed College
> Director, Early Voting Information Center
> http://earlyvoting.net
>
> General Inquiries: Jane Calderbank calderja at reed.edu
>
> Media Inquiries: Kevin Myers myersk at reed.edu
>
> On Jan 17, 2021, at 9:18 AM, Lorraine Minnite <lminnite at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Margaret Groarke reviews fraud claims and the 1970s/Carter proposed
> reforms. See, Groarke, "The Impact of Voter Fraud Claims on Voter
> Registration Reform Legislation," *Political Science Quarterly* 131(3):
> 571-595.
>
> On Sat, Jan 16, 2021 at 11:14 PM Brian Landsberg <blandsberg at pacific.edu>
> wrote:
>
>> The obsession led then US Attorney Jeff Sessions to prosecute the Marion
>> Three for voter fraud following the 1984 election. This Ill considered
>> prosecution and the speedy acquittal cost Sessions a federal judgeship.
>> Lani Guinier led the defense and described the case in her book.
>>
>> Sent from my iPhone
>>
>> On Jan 16, 2021, at 7:33 PM, J Morgan Kousser <kousser at caltech.edu>
>> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> The Bouie article misses the fact that the Republican "voter fraud" push
>> began earlier. In 1977, Jimmy Carter introduced a fairly comprehensive
>> voting reform law, which grew out of failures to pass such bills that began
>> in 1969 or even earlier. The most innovative part of the Carter
>> Administration bill was same day registration. A great many Republican
>> members of Congress had previously favored at least some of the components
>> of the measure, including House Minority Leader John Rhodes. Suddenly,
>> Republican activists began to attack the bill, with Kevin Phillips
>> contending that it would "blow the Republican Party sky high" and the
>> Heritage Foundation alleging that it might allow "eight million illegal
>> aliens in the U.S. to vote." Gov. Ronald Reagan asserted that the bill, if
>> successful in registering more voters, would "render the Republican Party
>> as dead as the dodo bird." Although RNC Chair Bill Brock had previously
>> called universal registration "a Republican concept," after meeting with
>> Reagan, he denounced it as "the Universal Voter Fraud Bill" and "a
>> Democratic Power Grab." The quotations are from Rick Perlstein's
>> "Reaganland," pp. 93-95. The bill, HR5400, was never brought to a vote in
>> either house. See CQ Almanac, 33 (1977), 798-800. So far as I know, there
>> is no comprehensive academic study of this and other precursors of the NVRA.
>> On 1/16/2021 6:05 PM, Hess, Douglas (Doug) wrote:
>>
>> A good article in the NYTimes by Janelle Bouie about ACORN and the
>> history of “Stop the Steal” rhetoric and conspiracy theories:
>>
>> “‘Stop the Steal’ Didn’t Start With Trump”
>> https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/15/opinion/voter-fraud-capitol-attack.html?referringSource=articleShare
>>
>> Excerpt:
>>
>> “Over the ensuing years, under pressure from the White House ahead of the
>> presidential election in 2004, the Justice Department ramped up its crusade
>> against voter fraud. Of particular interest was ACORN, a now-defunct
>> advocacy organization that was working — as the presidential election got
>> underway — to register hundreds of thousands of low-income voters.
>> Swing-state Republicans accused the group of “ manufacturing voters ,” and
>> federal prosecutors looked, unsuccessfully, for evidence of wrongdoing.
>> Later, Karl Rove would press President Bush’s second attorney general,
>> Alberto Gonzales, to fire a number of U.S. attorneys for failure to
>> investigate voter fraud allegations, leading to a scandal that eventually
>> led to Gonzales’s resignation in 2007.
>>
>> ACORN and voter fraud would remain a bête noire for Republicans for the
>> rest of the decade. Conservative advocacy groups and media organizations
>> produced a steady stream of anti-ACORN material and, as the 2008 election
>> campaign heated up, did everything they could to tie Democratic candidates,
>> and Barack Obama in particular, to a group they portrayed as radical and
>> dangerous. ACORN, Rush Limbaugh said in one characteristic segment , has
>> “been training young Black kids to hate, hate, hate this country.”
>>
>> During his second debate with Obama, a few weeks before the election, the
>> Republican nominee, John McCain, charged that ACORN “is now on the verge of
>> maybe perpetrating one of the greatest frauds in voter history in this
>> country, maybe destroying the fabric of democracy.” And his campaign
>> materials similarly accused Obama, Joe Biden and the Democratic Party of
>> orchestrating a vast conspiracy of fraud. “We’ve always known the
>> Obama-Biden Democrats will do anything to win this November, but we didn’t
>> know how far their allies would go,” read one mailer…”
>>
>>
>>
>> -----------------------
>>
>> Douglas R Hess
>>
>> Assistant Professor, Political Science/Policy Studies
>>
>> Grinnell College
>>
>> *On sabbatical until fall 2021*
>>
>> *My latest op-ed using Grinnell College National Poll:
>> https://bit.ly/hesshess102020 <https://bit.ly/hesshess102020> *
>>
>>
>>
>> *Website: http://www.douglasrhess.com <http://www.douglasrhess.com/> *
>>
>> -----------------------
>>
>>
>>
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>> --
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>> 1818 Craig Ave.
>> Altadena, CA 91001-3430
>>
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