November Election To Be Postponed? Bush Regime Working Out Procedures For
Postponing November Election By Webster Griffin Tarpley 7-10-4
- The Bush regime is now working out procedures for
postponing the coming November general election. This is totally
unprecedented -- even in 1864, in the midst of the Civil War, the
Lincoln vs. McClellan presidential contest took place according to the
schedule established by the Constitution and relevant statutes. This
represents further planning for a cold coup designed to perpetuate the
power of the current gaggle of discredited neocon ideologues and their
Wall Street backers.
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- In a shamelessly partisan move, Homeland Secretary
Ridge today announced that al Qaeda has advanced its preparation for a
terror attack in the US designed to disrupt the Democratic process. One
wonders how Ridge is able to know so much about the specific intent of
the terror attack he says is coming, in particular the part about the
intent to disrupt the election. Ridge said during his press conference
that we are now in a "post-Madrid" atmosphere. He also confirmed that
planning for postponing the general election is now in full
swing.
Ridge's press conference marked a crude new low in the
shameless terror demagogy of the Bush regime. Even Democratic
politicians and CNN talking heads were able to surmise that this outing
was largely aimed at deflating the five-point approval bounce which
Kerry had acquired by naming Edwards. It is clear that the Bush campaign
will rely on a relentless pounding of the electorate with terror
warnings, alerts, and alarms over the next four months -- in the first
place as psychological warfare to strengthen the regime. At a deeper
level, the option of an actual ABC/WMD terror attack at least one order
of magnitude greater than 9-11 must be reckoned with, possibly as an
October Surprise, or perhaps sooner.
Finally, the Congress is
looking into the June 9 incident in which a small plane lacking a
transponder caused the panicked stampeding of the entire US Congress,
including Senators, Congressmen, and staff. This was a transparent ploy
to terrorize the Congress, where both parties have lately been giving
Bush some embarrassing moments over Abu Ghraid, the national debt, the
budget, and related issues.
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Feds Eye Postponement Of November
Elections
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Associated Press
-
July 1 2004
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- WASHINGTON -- The
government needs to establish guidelines for canceling or rescheduling
elections if terrorists strike the United States again, says the
chairman of a new federal voting commission.
Such guidelines do
not currently exist, said DeForest B. Soaries, head of the voting
panel.
- Soaries was appointed to the federal Election
Assistance Commission last year by President Bush.
Soaries said
he wrote to National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice and Homeland
Security Secretary Tom Ridge in April to raise the concerns.
"I
am still awaiting their response," he said. "Thus far we have not begun
any meaningful discussion." Spokesmen for Rice and Ridge did not
immediately respond to requests for comment.
Soaries noted that
Sept. 11, 2001, fell on Election Day in New York City -- and he said
officials there had no rules to follow in making the decision to cancel
the election and hold it later.
Event! s in Spain, where a
terrorist attack shortly before the March election possibly influenced
its outcome, show the need for a process to deal with terrorists
threatening or interrupting the Nov. 2 presidential election in America,
he said.
"Look at the possibilities. If the federal government
were to cancel an election or suspend an election, it has tremendous
political implications. If the federal government chose not to suspend
an election it has political implications," said Soaries, a Republican
and former secretary of state of New Jersey.
"Who makes the call,
under what circumstances is the call made, what are the constitutional
implications?" he said. "I think we have to err on the side of
transparency to protect the voting rights of the
country."
Soaries said his bipartisan, four-member commission
might make a recommendation to Congress about setting up
guidelies.
"I'm hopeful that there are some proposals already
being floated. If there are,! we're not aware of them. If there are not,
we will probably try to put one on the table," he said.
Soaries
also said he's met with a former New York state elections director to
discuss how officials there handled the Sept. 11 attacks from the
perspective of election administration. He said the commission is
getting information from New York documenting the process used
there.
"The states control elections, but on the national scale
where every state has its own election laws and its own election chief,
who's in charge?" he said.
Soaries also said he wants to know
what federal officials are doing to increase security on Election Day.
He said security officials must take care not to allow heightened
security measures to intimidate minority voters, but that local and
state election officials he's talked to have not been told what measures
to expect.
"There's got to be communication," he said, "between
law enforcement and election officials in preparat! ion for
November."
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Ridge Warns of Election Terror
Plot
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-
Associated Press
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By Katherine Pfleger Shrader
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Associated Press Writer
-
July 8 2004
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- WASHINGTON - The United
States is tightening security in the face of a steady stream of
intelligence indicating al-Qaida may seek to mount an attack aimed at
disrupting elections, the White House and Homeland Security officials
said Thursday.
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- Ridge Warns of Election Terror Plot (AP Video)
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- The Department of Homeland Security is addressing the
threat and has efforts under way to "ramp up security," White House
press secretary Scott McClellan said.
-
- Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge said the Bush
administration based its decision to bolster security on "credible"
reports about al-Qaida's plans, coupled with the pre-election terror
attack in Spain earlier this year and recent arrests in England, Jordan
and Italy.
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- "This is sobering information about those who wish to
do us harm," Ridge said. "But every day we strengthen the security of
our nation."
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- U.S. officials do not have specific knowledge about
where, when or how such an attack would take place, but the CIA (news -
web sites), FBI (news - web sites) and other agencies "are actively
working to gain that knowledge," Ridge said.
-
- Notwithstanding the heightened air of vigilance, the
government is not raising its color-coded terror alert status, he
said.
-
- A continuing stream of intelligence, including nuggets
of information gleaned from sources including militant-linked Web sites,
indicates an attack is being planned, said a senior intelligence
official, speaking on condition of anonymity. Plans for such an attack
are believed to be near completion, the official said, echoing what
officials said earlier in the summer before the Memorial Day
weekend.
- When asked if the threat is considered higher at the
political conventions this summer or as the nation gets closer to the
presidential election in early November, the official said concerns are
high from this point in time forward.
-
- In addition to ramping up security at the conventions
in Boston and New York, authorities have begun working through the
process of how to secure the thousands of polling sites that will be
used around the country this fall, said another senior intelligence
official, also speaking on condition of anonymity.
-
- "We have briefed the campaigns, both campaigns - the
Kerry-Edwards campaign as well as the Bush-Cheney campaign - about the
security measures that are being put in place for those conventions in
New York and Boston," said White House press secretary Scott
McClellan.
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- Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist told reporters that
Americans should not expect a major announcement on homeland security
any time soon, indicating that the nation's threat level could remain at
its "elevated" level.
-
- "There's, obviously, no reason for panic, or
paralysis," Frist said after a briefing for senators on intelligence
matters. "The country is at some increased risk between now and the time
of the presidential election. It's important for people to be aware of
that."
-
- "What is clear is that law enforcement has generally
been notified. ... There are enhanced activities on behalf of law
enforcement around the country to engage in deterrence and prevention,"
he said.
-
- In April, a working group made up of representatives
from agencies that touch on law enforcement, homeland security and
intelligence was established to deal with a series of events through the
election that may be attractive targets for terrorists, including the
presidential nominating conventions.
-
- Senior administration officials and counterterrorism
experts view the coming months as a time to increase vigilance out of
concern that Islamic militants may try to replicate the political
success they had in Spain with coordinated pre-election train
bombings.
-
- Nearly 200 died in the March attack, and the prime
minister's ruling Popular Party lost to a rival who promised a pullout
of Spanish troops from Iraq.
-
- Elaborate plans are already in the works to protect
the Republican and Democratic party conventions in New York and Boston,
which have been classified as National Security Special Events.
-
- With the designation - a concept that evolved from the
1996 Summer Olympics (news - web sites) in Atlanta - comes federal
funds, increased preparations and heightened security.
-
- http://globalresearch.ca/articles/TAR407B.html
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