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IssuesWSJ editorial leaves out relevant information in smear of ACORN
In an October 14 editorial, The Wall Street Journal asserted that Sen.
Barack Obama's "kind of organizers work at Acorn [the Association of Community Organizations for
Reform Now], the militant advocacy group that is turning up in reports about
voter fraud across the country." The editorial cited as evidence reports
that ACORN submitted allegedly false or duplicate voter registration
applications this year in Michigan, Nevada, Ohio, Florida, New Mexico, North
Carolina, Missouri, Wisconsin, Indiana, Connecticut, and Texas. But the
editorial did not note that the statutes of at least nine of those 11 states require third parties registering prospective voters
to submit all registration forms they received. In an October 10 press release, ACORN noted that "in almost every state we are required to turn in ALL completed
applications, even the ones we know to be problematic."
The Journal
also claimed that "recently, Democrats tried and failed to stuff an
'affordable housing' provision into the $700 billion bank rescue
package that would have let politicians give even more to Acorn." The Journal's claim echoes recent false
assertions by media figures and Republicans that Democrats wanted to
direct millions of dollars to ACORN in the bailout legislation. In fact, as Media Matters for America has repeatedly documented, neither the draft proposal nor
the final version of
the bailout bill contained any language mentioning ACORN. The claim is based on
a provision -- since removed and
absent from the bill President Bush signed -- that would have directed 20
percent of any profits realized on troubled assets purchased under the plan
into two previously established funds: the Housing Trust Fund and the Capital
Magnet Fund. Under legislation signed
by Bush in July, money going to the Housing Trust Fund is to be distributed by the
Department of Housing and Urban Development in the form of block grants to
states, which would then award grants to qualified applicants. Money going to
the Capital Magnet Fund is to be distributed by the U.S. Treasury Department through
a competitive grant application process.
Media Matters noted that when
Congress considered adding the provision in September, Salon.com's Gabriel
Winant reported that
ACORN's legislative director said the organization's housing advocacy
affiliate, ACORN Housing, is "considering applying for funds from the
Housing Trust Fund, but will probably choose not to do so," and that even
if it did, it would have to go through the same application process as any other
group.
Further, the Journal
editorial also noted that Obama "served as a lawyer for Acorn in 1995, in
a case against Illinois to increase access to the polls," but did not
note that the Department of Justice,
the League of Women Voters, and the
League of United Latin American Citizens joined with ACORN as plaintiffs in the suit, which sought
to force the state of
Illinois to implement a federal voter-registration
law.
A Media Matters
review of the election laws of the 11 states the Journal cited in asserting that ACORN is "turning up
in reports about voter fraud across the country" found that at least nine
of them have laws requiring organizations to submit all voter-registration forms to election officials.
Nevada
The Journal
wrote: "Earlier this month, Nevada's
Democratic Secretary of State Ross Miller requested a raid on Acorn's offices,
following complaints of false names and fictional addresses (including the
starting lineup of the Dallas Cowboys). Nevada's
Clark County Registrar of Voters Larry Lomax said he saw rampant fraud in 2,000
to 3,000 applications Acorn submitted weekly." According to Chapter
293.505 of the Nevada Revised Statutes,
"any ... person
providing a form for the application to register to vote to an elector for the
purpose of registering to vote ...
[s]hall not alter,
deface or destroy an application to register to vote that has been signed by an
elector except to correct information contained in the application after
receiving notice from the elector that a change in or addition to the
information is required." Violators are "guilty of a category E
felony." A "Guide to Conducting Voter
Registration Drives"
authored by Nevada Secretary of State Ross Miller further states, "When
the registration drive is complete, all forms, both completed and uncompleted,
must be returned to the respective county clerk."
Ohio
The Journal wrote:
"Officials in Ohio
are investigating voter fraud connected with Acorn." According to Chapter
3599.11 of the Ohio Revised Code, "No person
who helps another person register outside an official voter registration place
shall knowingly fail to return any registration form entrusted to that person
to any board of elections or the office of the secretary of state within ten
days after that registration form is completed, or on or before the thirtieth
day before the election, whichever day is earlier, unless the registration form
is received by the person within twenty-four hours of the thirtieth day before
the election, in which case the person shall return the registration form to
any board of elections or the office of the secretary of state within ten days
of its receipt." Violators are "guilty of election falsification, a
felony of the fifth degree," or of "a misdemeanor of the first degree"
under some circumstances.
Florida
The Journal
wrote: "Florida's Seminole County
is withholding Acorn registrations that appear fraudulent." According to Florida statutes,
"A third-party voter registration organization that collects voter
registration applications serves as a fiduciary to the applicant, ensuring that
any voter registration application entrusted to the third-party voter registration
organization, irrespective of party affiliation, race, ethnicity, or gender
shall be promptly delivered to the division or the supervisor of
elections." If the third-party voter registration organization fails to
submit a voter registration application, it is liable for "[a] fine in
the amount of $1,000 for any application not submitted if the third-party
registration organization or person, entity, or agency acting on its behalf
acted willfully."
New Mexico, North Carolina,
and Missouri
The Journal
wrote: "New Mexico, North
Carolina and Missouri
are looking into hundreds of dubious Acorn registrations."
According to Section 1-4-49 of the New Mexico Statutes and Court Rules,
"Organizations employing registration agents or using volunteer
registration agents shall deliver or mail a certificate of registration to the
secretary of state or county clerk within forty-eight hours of its completion
by the person registering to vote or deliver it the next business day if the
appropriate office is closed for that forty-eight-hour period." Violators
are "guilty of a petty misdemeanor and the person's third-party
registration agent status shall be revoked." In
addition, if the violator "is an employee of an organization and has
decision-making authority involving the organization's voter registration
activities or is an officer of the organization," then their
organization "shall be subject to civil penalties" of "two
hundred fifty dollars ($250) for each violation, not to exceed five thousand
dollars ($5,000)."
According to Section § 163-82.6 of the North Carolina General Assembly General Statutes,
"The applicant may delegate the
submission of the form to another person. Any person who
communicates to an applicant acceptance of that delegation shall deliver that
form so that it is received by the appropriate county board of elections in
time to satisfy the registration deadline in subdivision (1) or (2) of
subsection (c) of this section for the next election." It is a
"Class 2 misdemeanor" to "communicate to the applicant
acceptance of the delegation described in subsection (a) of this section and
then fail to make a good faith effort to deliver the form."
Under Section 115.203 of Missouri election law,
"No person who agrees or
offers to submit a voter registration application for another person shall
knowingly destroy, deface, or conceal such voter registration application. ... Any
person who accepts or receives a voter registration application from another
person and agrees or offers to submit such application to the election
authority for the registrant shall deliver the application to the election
authority within seven days of accepting or receiving the application."
Further, "[a] violation of this section is a class four election
offense."
Indiana
The Journal
wrote: "Then there's Lake County,
Indiana, which has already found
more than 2,100 bogus applications among the 5,000 Acorn dumped right before
the deadline. 'All the signatures looked exactly the same,' said
Ruthann Hoagland, of the county election board." According to Indiana Code
3-14-2-5, "A person who recklessly destroys
or fails to file or deliver to the proper officer a registration affidavit or
form of registration after the affidavit or form has been executed commits a
Class A misdemeanor."
Connecticut
The Journal
wrote: "Bridgeport, Connecticut estimates about 20% of Acorn's
registrations were faulty." According to Section 9-23g, paragraph b, of
the Connecticut General Statutes,
"If the applicant entrusts the applicant's application to another person
or to such a voter registration agency for mailing or return to the registrars
of voters, such person or agency shall immediately mail or return the
application."
Texas
The Journal
wrote: "As of July, the city of Houston
had rejected or put on hold about 40% of the 27,000 registration cards
submitted by Acorn." According to Chapter § 13.042 of the Texas Election Code,
"A volunteer deputy registrar shall deliver in person, or by personal
delivery through another designated volunteer deputy, to the registrar each
completed voter registration application submitted to the deputy, as provided
by this section." Intentional failure to comply is a Class A misdemeanor.
According to §
13.044, it is a
"Class C misdemeanor" to "purport[] to act as a volunteer
deputy registrar when the person does not have an effective appointment as a
volunteer deputy registrar." Further, according to a "Short Guide to Helping Voters Register
Under Texas Law" produced by Project Vote, which collaborated with ACORN
on its voter registration drive, "only properly appointed volunteer
deputy registrars may engage in voter registration activities."
From the Journal
editorial:
At the recent Emmy Awards, historian
Laura Linney averred that America's
Founders had been "community organizers" -- like Barack Obama. Too
bad they aren't like that any more. Mr. Obama's kind of organizers work at
Acorn, the militant advocacy group that is turning up in reports about voter
fraud across the country.
[...]
But the organization's real genius
is getting American taxpayers to foot the bill. According to a 2006 report from
the Employment Policies Institute (EPI), Acorn has been on the federal take
since 1977. For instance, Acorn's American Institute for Social Justice claimed
$240,000 in tax money between fiscal years 2002 and 2003. Its American
Environmental Justice Project received 100% of its revenue from government
grants in the same years. EPI estimates the Acorn Housing Corporation alone
received some $16 million in federal dollars from 1997-2007. Only recently,
Democrats tried and failed to stuff an "affordable housing" provision
into the $700 billion bank rescue package that would have let politicians give
even more to Acorn.
All this money gives Acorn the
ability to pursue its other great hobby: electing liberals. Acorn is spending
$16 million this year to register new Democrats and is already boasting it has
put 1.3 million new voters on the rolls. The big question is how many of these
registrations are real.
The Michigan Secretary of State told
the press in September that Acorn had submitted "a sizeable number of duplicate
and fraudulent applications." Earlier this month, Nevada's Democratic Secretary of State Ross
Miller requested a raid on Acorn's offices, following complaints of false names
and fictional addresses (including the starting lineup of the Dallas Cowboys). Nevada's Clark County
Registrar of Voters Larry Lomax said he saw rampant fraud in 2,000 to 3,000
applications Acorn submitted weekly.
Officials in Ohio
are investigating voter fraud connected with Acorn, and Florida's
Seminole County is withholding Acorn
registrations that appear fraudulent. New Mexico,
North Carolina and Missouri are looking into hundreds of
dubious Acorn registrations. Wisconsin
is investigating Acorn employees for, according to an election official,
"making people up or registering people that were still in prison."
Then there's Lake County, Indiana,
which has already found more than 2,100 bogus applications among the 5,000
Acorn dumped right before the deadline. "All the signatures looked exactly
the same," said Ruthann Hoagland, of the county election board. Bridgeport, Connecticut
estimates about 20% of Acorn's registrations were faulty. As of July, the city
of Houston had
rejected or put on hold about 40% of the 27,000 registration cards submitted by
Acorn.
[...]
Which brings us to Mr. Obama, who
got his start as a Chicago
"community organizer" at Acorn's side. In 1992 he led voter
registration efforts as the director of Project Vote, which included Acorn.
This past November, he lauded Acorn's leaders for being "smack dab in the
middle" of that effort. Mr. Obama also served as a lawyer for Acorn in
1995, in a case against Illinois
to increase access to the polls.
Published: Wed, 15 Oct 2008 01:46:03 GMT - Source: Mediamatters.Org - Read the article
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