[Palast wrote a version of this article for The Nation in May, but this
one, published a month later, is much clearer, shorter and better written]

One million black votes didn't count in the 2000 presidential election

It's not too hard to get your vote lost -- if some politicians want it to
be lost!

San Francisco Chronicle, Sunday, June 20, 2004
by Greg Palast

In the 2000 presidential election, 1.9 million Americans cast ballots that
no one counted. "Spoiled votes" is the technical term. The pile of ballots
left to rot has a distinctly dark hue: About 1 million of them -- half of
the rejected ballots -- were cast by African Americans although black
voters make up only 12 percent of the electorate.

This year, it could get worse.

These ugly racial statistics are hidden away in the mathematical thickets
of the appendices to official reports coming out of the investigation of
ballot-box monkey business in Florida from the last go-'round.

How do you spoil 2 million ballots? Not by leaving them out of the fridge
too long. A stray mark, a jammed machine, a punch card punched twice will
do it. It's easy to lose your vote, especially when some politicians want
your vote lost.

While investigating the 2000 ballot count in Florida for BBC Television, I
saw firsthand how the spoilage game was played -- with black voters the
predetermined losers.

Florida's Gadsden County has the highest percentage of black voters in the
state -- and the highest spoilage rate. One in 8 votes cast there in 2000
was never counted. Many voters wrote in "Al Gore." Optical reading
machines rejected these because "Al" is a "stray mark."

By contrast, in neighboring Tallahassee, the capital, vote spoilage was
nearly zip; every vote counted. The difference? In Tallahassee's white-
majority county, voters placed their ballots directly into optical
scanners. If they added a stray mark, they received another ballot with
instructions to correct it.

In other words, in the white county, make a mistake and get another
ballot; in the black county, make a mistake, your ballot is tossed.

The U.S. Civil Rights Commission looked into the smelly pile of spoiled
ballots and concluded that, of the 179,855 ballots invalidated by Florida
officials, 53 percent were cast by black voters. In Florida, a black
citizen was 10 times as likely to have a vote rejected as a white voter.

But let's not get smug about Florida's Jim Crow spoilage rate. Civil
Rights Commissioner Christopher Edley, recently appointed dean of Boalt
Hall School of Law at UC Berkeley, took the Florida study nationwide. His
team discovered the uncomfortable fact that Florida is typical of the
nation.

Philip Klinkner, the statistician working on the Edley investigations,
concluded, "It appears that about half of all ballots spoiled in the
U.S.A. -- about 1 million votes -- were cast by nonwhite voters."

This "no count," as the Civil Rights Commission calls it, is no accident.
In Florida, for example, I discovered that technicians had warned Gov. Jeb
Bush's office well in advance of November 2000 of the racial bend in the
vote- count procedures.

Herein lies the problem. An apartheid vote-counting system is far from
politically neutral. Given that more than 90 percent of the black
electorate votes Democratic, had all the "spoiled" votes been tallied,
Gore would have taken Florida in a walk, not to mention fattening his
popular vote total nationwide. It's not surprising that the First
Brother's team, informed of impending rejection of black ballots, looked
away and whistled.

The ballot-box blackout is not the monopoly of one party. Cook County,
Ill., has one of the nation's worst spoilage rates. That's not surprising.
Boss Daley's Democratic machine, now his son's, survives by systematic
disenfranchisement of Chicago's black vote.

How can we fix it? First, let's shed the convenient excuses for vote
spoilage, such as a lack of voter education. One television network stated
as fact that Florida's black voters, newly registered and lacking
education, had difficulty with their ballots. In other words, blacks are
too dumb to vote.

This convenient racist excuse is dead wrong. After that disaster in
Gadsden, Fla., public outcry forced the government to change that black
county's procedures to match that of white counties. The result: near zero
spoilage in the 2002 election. Ballot design, machines and procedure, says
statistician Klinkner, control spoilage.

In other words, the vote counters, not the voters, are to blame.
Politicians who choose the type of ballot and the method of counting have
long fine-tuned the spoilage rate to their liking.

It is about to get worse. The ill-named "Help America Vote Act," signed by
President Bush in 2002, is pushing computerization of the ballot box.

California decertified some of Diebold Corp.'s digital ballot boxes in
response to fears that hackers could pick our next president. But the
known danger of black-box voting is that computers, even with their
software secure, are vulnerable to low-tech spoilage games: polls opening
late, locked-in votes, votes lost in the ether.

And once again, the history of computer-voting glitches has a decidedly
racial bias. Florida's Broward County grandly shifted to touch-screen
voting in 2002. In white precincts, all seemed to go well. In black
precincts, hundreds of African Americans showed up at polls with machines
down and votes that simply disappeared.

Going digital won't fix the problem. Canada and Sweden vote on paper
ballots with little spoilage and without suspicious counts.

In America, a simple fix based on paper balloting is resisted because,
unfortunately, too many politicians who understand the racial bias in the
vote- spoilage game are its beneficiaries, with little incentive to find
those missing 1 million black voters' ballots.

Greg Palast is the author of "The Best Democracy Money Can Buy - The New
Expanded Election Edition" from which this article is taken.  For more
information, visit www.GregPalast.com.

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