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[BRC-NEWS] Black Voters Ready to ‘Get Even’ for 2000 Fiasco

j w
Tue, 23 Dec 2003 10:42:16 -0800

http://blackpressusa.com/news

NATIONAL NEWS
Black Voters Ready to ‘Get Even’ for 2000 Fiasco
by Hazel Trice Edney
NNPA Washington Correspondent

WASHINGTON (NNPA)– One popular saying in politics recommends:
Don’t get mad, get even. Many African-Americans are still mad
at how the Black vote was undermined in 2000 – and they want to
get even.

“I think there is still a lot of anger out there after what
happened in Election 2000, people’s votes not getting counted,”
observes Melanie Campbell, president and CEO of the National
Coalition for Black Civic Participation (NCBCP) a non-profit
group of more than 80 organizations, which encourages civic
activism in the Black community. “This is the very first
presidential election that we’ll be faced with. We’re going to
do a media launch right at the top of the New Year.”

NCBVP is working with the nation’s nine major Black
fraternities and sororities on a string of voter registration
projects and with UniverSoul Circus, a traveling Black
production, to urge voter registration and turnout to their
audiences. The Washington-D.C.-based NCBVP is also on the verge
of launching its Unity ‘04 project, a coalition of a dozen
Black organizations that will use their collective strength to
implement a series of voter initiatives leading up to the
November election.

With the election slightly less than a year away, some groups
are already active.

“Voting and registration ought not be centered around election
time, but it ought to be continuous,” says Rev. Arnold W.
Howard of Baltimore, chairman of the African-American Ministers
Leadership Council (AAMLC), a non-partisan arm of People for
the American Way.

His group, approximately 100 ministers from around the country,
has launched a voter registration drive in seven states. The
program, called “Sanctified Seven,” is aimed at making a strong
impact in states where statewide races are normally tightly
contested.

The group is also paying special attention to states where the
Black voting-age population is high enough to mean the
difference between victory and defeat. The ministers are
encouraging individual parishioners to register at least seven
people every few days and equally important, get them to show
up at the polls.

The states, with their 2000 Black turnout rates in parenthesis,
are: Florida, with a
Black voting age population (BVAP) of 76.2 percent (43.2
percent); Illinois with a BVAP of 66.8 percent (67 percent);
Michigan, with a BVAP of 67.6 percent (60.9 percent); Missouri
with a BVAP of 67.9 percent, (68.2 percent); Ohio, with a BVAP
of 67.4, (53.7 percent); Pennsylvania, with a BVAP of 68.1
percent (61.3 percent); and Wisconsin, with a BVAP of 70.8
percent (62 percent).
In just one month, the group has already registered more than
2,000 new voters in Cleveland, according to Rev. Romal J. Tune
of Washington, the national field organizer for the ministers
program.

“People are very energized. People are interested in the
issues,” Tune says.

“Ministers groups and congregations have been doing
registration at malls, shopping centers, grocery stores. They
do what we call walks around the community in a seven-block
radius of the church. We call them Jericho walks, knocking on
doors,” Tune says. “And then we have people in the pews who
have influence in their workplace. They start with registering
the entire congregation. And then the congregation goes out
into other places. One lady said, ‘I went to my bowling league
and I registered 20 people.’”

The “Sanctified Seven” campaign is reminiscent of “Arrive with
Five!” the 2000 campaign that encouraged Black voters in
Florida to carry five people with them to the polls, bolstering
the Black vote by 15 percent in that state.

Still, the U. S. Supreme Court halted a recount of discarded
voting ballots in Florida, effectively giving the state’s 25
electoral votes to George W. Bush.

“I think it clearly showed the need for people – especially
African-Americans - to get out and vote and how even a couple
of thousand votes can make a difference in the presidential
election,” says Cheryl Cooper, executive director of the
National Council of Negro Women, an organization that held a
town hall meeting last week at its annual convention with the
theme, “Help America Vote Again.”

Nearly 200,000 votes in Florida alone were lost because of
faulty voting machines and ballots, voter intimidation and
confused poll workers, according to the U. S. Commission on
Civil Rights. The commission also reported that Black voters in
Florida were nearly 10 times more likely than
non-Black voters to have their ballots rejected.

Nationally, an estimated 4 million to 6 million votes were lost
in 2000 because of voting foul-ups, according to the

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
Intent on avoiding such problems next year, groups are not only
registering and educating early, but planning major get out to
vote and voter protection campaigns, including lawyers as
watchdogs at the polls, Campbell says.

The Black youth vote will also be key in next year’s election,
says Jehmu Greene, president of Rock the Vote, a Los
Angeles-based organization which works to inspire young adults
to register and vote.

“Especially with young people, it’s about the issues,” Greene
says. “Our task is to connect the issues with a young person’s
daily life. How the decisions of the candidates or the elected
officials affect the young
people.”

High-profile issues, such as the war in Iraq, the economy and
affirmative action appear to be escalating youth interest in
voting, Greene says.

“Your peers are out there on the front line. They are the ones
fighting that war because they were looking at using higher
education, which would put them in a better position to get
jobs,” she says. “And, especially with this
generation, tolerance and diversity is important, anything
dealing with civil rights.”

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, 51.3 percent of the 3.8
million Black youth ages 18-24 were not registered to vote in
2000. And of the 1.8 million who were registered, 65.8 percent
did not vote.

White youths in the same age bracket also had the lowest voter
registration and turnout among their race. A slightly higher
51.7 percent of the 17.2 million White youths ages 18-24 were
not registered. Of the 8.9 million registered, 62.8 percent did
not vote, slightly lower than the Black youth rate.

Black Youth Vote aims to form a street team consisting of
25,000 registrars around the country, especially trained to
register and educate Black youth, Greene says. Already, the
group has electronic voter registration forms set up on the
website of Black Entertainment Television and is planning a bus
tour with registrars traveling from Los Angeles to Florida
between June and November, registering youth to vote at
historically Black colleges and universities, concerts, shows
and anywhere young people hang out.

The early drives are also aimed to educate people on national
issues affecting them at the local level so they can make
informed decisions in Democratic primaries to begin in January,
activists say.
Cooper of the National Council of Negro Women observes:

“When you look at the potential assaults on affirmative action,
on women’s rights and when you look at the judicial nominees
that are currently being put forth with this administration,
there are some real concerns about turning back the clock,
eroding some of the significant gains that people of color and
that women have made in the past decade.”

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  • [BRC-NEWS] Black Voters Ready to ‘Get Even’ for 2000 Fiasco j w