Thursday, October 23, 2008

ACORN Fights Back


by Richard Hopson

In the midst of the predictable partisan exaggerations, distortions and occasional lies that close election races generate, ACORN has become the focus of an extraordinary amount of attention over our voter-registration program. We submitted nearly 40,000 voter registration applications in San Diego and throughout California, and 1.3 million nationwide. In communities across the country, anxiety about the direction of our country, and more specifically our economy, is driving much of the interest in this year's presidential election. Voter turnout is expected to be of historic proportions. What is surprising is that these attacks, issued from partisan sources, have become relentless, and wildly exaggerated. We've even been accused by some Republicans of causing the global economic crisis.

The truth, plain and simple, is that no illegal votes will be cast as a consequence of ACORN's voter-registration program. In fact, illegal votes constitute fewer than 1 out of a million votes cast, and no illegal vote has ever been tied to ACORN, in spite of the almost 2 million registrations we submitted in 2004 and 2006. The small percentage of problematic cards that we have submitted to local election boards in 2008 -- and that we are required by law to submit, even cards that we can plainly see are invalid -- will not result in any illegal voting, contrary to over-the-top partisan claims. The irony in these attacks is that our registration drive and get-out-the-vote program is nonpartisan.

Why has ACORN (the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now ) become such a prominent talking point, sound bite and rallying cry? The answer, of course, is to win the upcoming election. What's troubling here is that a strategy to win can also include a strategy to suppress votes through tactics such as illegal purges of voter rolls, intimidation of voters at polling places and voter caging (a form of vote suppression that involves direct mail and challenging voter status).

Sen. John McCain (who as recently as 2006 attended ACORN events and supported some of ACORN's activities) suggested in the final presidential debate that ACORN poses a threat to "the fabric of our democracy," as if problems with some registration cards -- almost all of which ACORN pointed out to election boards - rise to the same level of danger to our way of life as do the economic crisis or threats from sworn enemies abroad. Eighteen months ago, when our voter-registration drive began, his claim would be laughable, but in the context of a close election and a shameful history in our country of disenfranchising poor people and people of color, including dirty partisan tricks aimed directly at impoverished communities of color in the past two presidential elections, there is nothing funny about it.

The history and hypocrisy is coming to light. On Monday, the Los Angeles Times reported that the Republican Party hired a firm (for $12 per voter registered as Republican). Their "Republican" program resorted to despicable tactics, such as getting people to register as Republicans by telling them they were signing a petition for tougher penalties against child molesters.

We all need to watch out that overblown charges against ACORN don't divert attention from or serve as a justification for unethical and illegal conduct in this election by those who are attacking ACORN. As for the impact on ACORN itself, exaggerated and false claims are not without consequence, as evidenced by a torrent of hate mail and phone calls to our offices, including death threats against our staff, and breaks-ins last week at our Boston and Seattle offices.

Enough is enough.

ACORN will keep working to reduce the incidence of voter-registration cards with problems. For those who make much of the fact that one of our canvassers registered "Mickey Mouse," we have great confidence in the ability of our election boards to ensure that neither "Mickey Mouse" nor any other illegal voter casts a ballot in this election.

The real issue is the 64 million Americans who will not be eligible to vote this November -- the worst citizen-participation rate of any Western democracy. Our work to reduce barriers to voting and to encourage participation in democracy is essential to reweaving "the fabric of our democracy." Ugly, cynical and partisan attempts to cast a shadow on this historic opportunity to reverse the disparities in the American electorate only create further divisions in our communities.

The citizens ACORN has helped register this year are very real. Many of them will be coming out to vote next month. McCain should welcome these voters to our democracy and campaign for their support.

We at ACORN intend to be vigilant in our efforts to ensure that every single American who should vote gets to vote. ACORN will be out in our communities on election day, walking people to the polls, and helping to make sure that everyone's vote -- and voice -- is heard.

Richard Hopson is the elected chair of California ACORN, the state's largest organization of low-to-moderate income families, with chapters in more than 75 communities. To learn the truth about ACORN, visit www.acorn.org or e-mail caacornsfro@acorn.org. To read studies on voter fraud, go to www.projectvote.org

So do you think there is anything to the claims that McCain/Palin have made about ACORN?

9 comments:

Michael Melendez 2nd Period said...

"Obama says McCain puts Main Street last"

Sen. Barack Obama on Thursday charged that Sen. John McCain "wants to keep on putting corporations ahead of workers."

"Just yesterday, Sen. McCain strongly defended the Bush policy of lavishing tax cuts on corporations, including those that ship American jobs overseas.

"He made the strange argument that the best way to stop companies from shipping jobs overseas is to give more tax cuts to companies that are shipping jobs overseas," Obama said at a rally in Indianapolis, Indiana.

Obama was referring to comments McCain made Wednesday in an interview with CNN's Wolf Blitzer.

McCain said that big corporations often move work overseas if they can because the tax rate is much lower.

"If they go to Ireland, they're only paying 11 percent. So where are they going to go where they can create wealth and create jobs? It's simple fundamental economics," McCain said as he defended his plan to cut the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 25 percent.

Obama on Thursday said, "My opponent may call that 'fundamental economics,' but we know that's just another name for the Wall Street first, Main Street last."

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Obama also continued to link McCain to President Bush's policies. In an interview Wednesday with the Washington Times newspaper, McCain distanced himself from the president as he lashed out at Bush's record on a host of issues.

"Spending, the conduct of the war in Iraq for years, growth in the size of government, larger than any time since the Great Society, laying a $10 trillion debt on future generations of America, owing $500 billion to China, obviously, failure to both enforce and modernize the [financial] regulatory agencies that were designed for the 1930s and certainly not for the 21st century, failure to address the issue of climate change seriously," McCain told the Times when asked to name his criticisms of Bush.

"Those are just some of them," McCain said, laughing.

Earlier Thursday, McCain kicked off his "Joe the Plumber" tour as he worked to capture Florida's blue-collar vote.

"Whether it's Joe the Plumber in Ohio, or Joe over here ... we shouldn't be taxing our small businesses, as Obama wants to do," McCain said as he thanked the 'Joes' in Ormond Beach.

McCain's other Florida stops Thursday include Daytona Beach, Altamonte Springs, Orlando, Plant City and Sarasota.

McCain charged that Obama believes in "redistributing the wealth, not in policies that grow our economy and create jobs and opportunities for all Americans."

"Sen. Obama is more concerned with controlling who gets your piece of the pie than he is in growing the pie," McCain said. Fact check: Obama's plan for small businesses

Obama holds a 3 percentage point lead over McCain in Florida, 49 percent to 46 percent, according to CNN's average of Florida polls. Florida has 27 electoral votes up for grabs.

The Republican ticket is focusing its argument on Obama's highly publicized conversation with Ohio voter Samuel J. Wurzelbacher, since dubbed "Joe the Plumber."

Earlier this month, Wurzelbacher told Obama that he was about to buy a company that makes more than $250,000 a year and was concerned that the Democrat would tax him more.

Obama explained his tax plan in depth, saying it's better to lower taxes for Americans who make less money so that they could afford to buy from his business. His tax plan would lower taxes for people making less than $250,000 a year.

"I think that when you spread the wealth around, it's good for everybody," Obama told Wurzelbacher.

McCain and running mate Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin have said that Obama's plan sounds like socialism.

Obama shot back Wednesday at a rally in Leesburg, Virginia, telling voters:

"Let's be clear about who John McCain is fighting for. He is not fighting for Joe the Plumber, he is fighting for 'Joe the Hedge Fund Manager.' He is fighting for 'Joe the CEO.'"

Following the rally in Indianapolis, Obama was expected to leave the campaign trail and visit his ailing grandmother in Hawaii.

In an interview on CBS' "The Early Show," Obama said it is important for him to be by his grandmother's side because he did not get to see his mother before she died.

Speaking about his mother's death, Obama said, "We knew she wasn't doing well, but you know, the diagnosis was such that we thought we had a little more time and we didn't. And so I want to make sure that I don't make the same mistake twice."

Obama plans to return to the campaign on Saturday, Obama campaign spokesman Robert Gibbs said.


Obama's running mate, Sen. Joe Biden, was campaigning in North Carolina on Thursday, with rallies in Charlotte, Winston-Salem and Raleigh.

JenniferWang3 said...

"Destroying the fabric of democracy"?

Really?

I don't think ACORN is purposely committing voter fraud like McCain seems to say it is. The most recent issue with ACORN seems to be about some falsified voter registrations, but investigation showed that it was not done to permit illegal voting. It seems the employees were just trying to get paid for doing no work by making making up names rather than actually looking for unregistered voters.

kaylagarcia_1 said...

Any registration cards issued by ACORN should be thrown away. Their various fraud cases overpower the actual number of truthful registrations that they've submitted. Just the fact that they've allowed Mickey Mouse to be a choice on their card shows that these people aren't serious about the upcoming election. I really do believe that they register under false names and names that belong to people who either don't know their name is being used in such a case or people who aren't even alive anymore. It seems as if ACORN just wants public attention due to such a historical election and we just don't need to give that to them. They're messing up our democratic system by playing around with voting rules. The freedom to vote is too important to our country and we need to keep it orderly so we should just disregard ACORN in its entirety and stay away from it so that we can get a truly accurate depiction of who voters are really going to vote for and how many will actually vote on Nov. 4.

eliseodeleon1 said...

In my opinion , I don't think that there is really any evidence to support the claims that McCain and Palin have made against ACORN. Out of all the illegal votes that have been cast in elections none of them have ever been tied to ACORN. Therefore, I don't see why McCain and Palin's claims about ACORN being a threat to the "fabric of our democracy" are true at all. On the other hand, I do understand why people would make such claims since this election could possibly turn out historical numbers in voting. ACORN is probably just trying to make sure to get everyone who can vote to vote for reform. I realy don't know that much about ACORN, but I hope they really aren't developing a strategy to suppress votes through tactics such as illegal purges of voter rolls, intimidation of voters at polling places and voter caging. These tactics would just demonstrate how far people are willing to go to change our country from its curent state.

jack shen 1 said...

It as if John McCain had ran out of topics in that last debate. His hysterical argument ranged from Joe the plumber to ACORN. If McCain can't find a good argument of why he should be the next president, then he shouldn't be running for it, especially with Palin as the vice. His attacks Obama on the grounds of ACORN really show how much of a "maverick" he is, and how immature he has become.

DionePompa4 said...

I think it's great that some one or group is out there trying to help people be able to vote and i don't think there's anything that ACORN is doing that will be a threat to our democracy...so i don't really see what Mcains problem is.

WinifredConrad1 said...

Initially, I had wondered if there might be something to the claims people were making about ACORN. I did a little reading and gained nothing, because, as always, most information on the internet is completely partisan or ridiculous... And creates this ugly, stupid, convoluted mess of nothing...

Then I read this...

"The irony in these attacks is that our registration drive and get-out-the-vote program is nonpartisan."

And now I really have to wonder, why are people so stupid? Has anyone even bothered to find this out before slinging mud at ACORN? Do people even know what it is anymore or is it just some negative buzzword now?

It's ridiculous, yet typical. I'm sick of it... I have no energy left for this kind of thing. Reading this just makes me feel disgusted at the general lack of understanding. I hate people, they are disgusting and horrible. Blah.

MarianneMullen3 said...

I think that if ACORN is doing somewhat shady things McCain just wants to be seen saying that those shady things are wrong to make himself look good.

AndrewGarcia02 said...

I doubt that anyone would do that on purpose. Why would somebody risk that much on something that big? Maybe it was just lazy employees looking to get out of doing their job for that day, and just making up names.