Another report on GOP related dirty tricks this election season:
http://abcnews.go.com/print?id=5963751

'Tis the Season of Election Dirty Tricks: Scaring Student Voters
Flyer Warns of Undercover Police Presence at Polls on Election Day
By AVNI PATEL

Oct. 6, 2008—

Election officials and watchdog groups are bracing for the wave of sneaky or 
suspicious phone calls, leaflets and emails that typically hit battleground 
states in the final 30 days of the presidential campaign.

Young voters at Drexel University in Philadelphia, Penn. have already been 
targeted, with students reporting that flyers have been posted around campus 
warning that undercover police will be at the polls on Election Day looking to 
make arrests.

The flyer reads like a friendly letter to fellow students relaying a warning 
from an "Obama supporter": "He informed me that on the day of the election 
there will be undercover officers to execute warrants on those who come to vote 
based on the anticipated turnout," writes the anonymous student in the letter 
which was later posted on the Drexel College Democrats website. "He advised me 
if I had any outstanding warrants or traffic offenses I should clear them up 
prior to voting."

Political experts say the Drexel flyer is a classic example of voter 
suppression  a practice that involves scaring, angering, or confusing voters 
so that they stay at home on Election Day.

"The basic idea is that you intimidate people by saying that law enforcement is 
using the polling place to catch scofflaws&criminals&whoever. It's basically a 
deterrent to keep people away from voting," said Allen Raymond, a former 
Republican operative who went to prison for three-months in 2006 for his 
involvement in a scheme to jam the phones at headquarters of the Democratic 
get-out-the vote effort in New Hampshire in 2002.

Raymond says that such tactics have evolved from some of the more overt voter 
intimidation schemes seen back in the early 1980s when the GOP's "Ballot 
Security Task Force" used armed off-duty police officers at the polling places 
in New Jersey and posted signs reading "voter fraud is a felony."

Other underhanded tactics seek to confuse voters about their voter 
registration. In 2006, voters in Virginia reportedly received fake voicemail 
messages from the state elections commission claiming that the voters were 
registered in another state and could be criminally charged if they cast their 
vote in Virginia.

"It doesn't take much to discourage people from voting," said Dr. Larry Sabato, 
political analyst and director of the University of Virginia's Center for 
Politics.

"Generally when people see that, they think 'I just don't want to take a risk. 
I've got enough problems in my life, I think I'll just skip this one."

Raymond and Sabato say voters should be on the look out for a number of other 
time-honored tricks, including:

- "Push-poll" phone calls using the guise of a survey to push negative 
information about a candidate.

- Leaflets or emails listing the wrong date or a "rain date" for the election.

- Automated voicemail messages telling voters that the location of their 
polling place has changed.

- Repeated late night automated "robo-calls" with a message from a candidate.

Raymond says that some of the dirtiest  and most effective  tricks are 
designed to trigger a "latent bigoted reaction." Perhaps the most notorious 
example was the smear against Senator John McCain in South Carolina before the 
state's presidential primary in 2000.

Anonymous opponents used push-polls and flyers to spread a whisper campaign 
suggesting that McCain's Bangladeshi-born adopted daughter was his illegitimate 
black child.

In his book, "How to Rig an Election: Confessions of a Republican Operative", 
Raymond describes how he helped devise other subtle tricks playing on voters' 
prejudices during the 2000 congressional race in New Jersey. One trick involved 
phone calls to Democratic voters of Eastern European descent using the voice of 
an "angry black man," while another used taped phone messages to Democratic 
union households using actors with thick Hispanic accents. The ultimate goal of 
both efforts was to make the voters "throw up their hands" and stay away from 
the polls.

Such schemes may be harder to pull off today now that federal laws require 
campaigns and parties to identify themselves to callers, but political experts 
say that in the age of the Internet the dirty trickster has an almost infinite 
ability to carry out their schemes with easy and anonymity.

"It's easy, it's untraceable, and by the time you find anything about it, the 
election is over," said Sabato.

Click Here for the Investigative Homepage.

Copyright © 2008 ABC News Internet Ventures


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
Adobe® ColdFusion® 8 software 8 is the most important and dramatic release to 
date
Get the Free Trial
http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;207172674;29440083;f

Archive: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-community/message.cfm/messageid:277279
Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-community/subscribe.cfm
Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/unsubscribe.cfm?user=89.70.5

Reply via email to