http://www.freepress.org/columns/display/3/2005/1116
Wed Apr 27
2005
Columns
Bob Fitrakis
How
Blackwell and Petro Saved Bush’s Brain: And the rise of the right wing
juggernaut in Ohio
April 27,
2005
The hotly
disputed results of the 2004 presidential election have become entangled in a
fundamentalist crusade over who will control Ohio. Extremist right wing
screachers such as Pastor Rod Parsley of the World Harvest Church, Ann Coulter,
Alan Keyes, Ohio gubernatorial candidate J. Kenneth Blackwell and followers of
Jerry Falwell, have taken center pulpit in an escalated war over what really
happened when George W. Bush was allegedly re-elected in November, 2004, and
who will occupy the Buckeye Statehouse in 2006.
The bitterly
contested 2004 election results in Ohio have taken a religious twist. As Pastor
Parsley backed by his suburban Columbus mega-church, is now in the middle of a
Silent No More book tour aimed in part at destroying the remnants of America’s
independent judiciary, but primarily aimed at electing Blackwell governor.
Hate-based
anti-liberal activists Coulter and Keyes joined Parsley on April 16 to help
launch the tour. Ohio’s Secretary of State Blackwell, infamous for dubiously
delivering Ohio and thus the presidency to George Bush in November, 2004, is
also part of the crusade. In his book dedication Parsley cites Blackwell for
his “courageous and outspoken support of moral values and for your invaluable
involvement during the Silent No More tour. Character like yours is
instrumental in restoring honor to public service.”
That “public
service” recently came under new scrutiny when William Anthony, the Democratic
Chair of the Franklin Country Board of Elections, revealed that on November 2,
a number of voting machines were transferred from inner city precincts to
Parsley’s suburban church. Thousands of African-Americans were deprived of
their vote due to the fact that their precincts lacked sufficient balloting
hardware. But voters at Parsley’s extreme right-wing precinct had no such
waits.
In nearby
Gahanna, at a precinct housed in the New Life Church, the Republicans also got
a faith-based boost. New Life’s founder and senior pastor is Dave Earley, a
graduate of Jerry Falwell’s Liberty University. New Life’s pastor of student
ministry, Ron Vining, is also a Falwell product. The two of them helped lead a
30-day Pray Down for Bush victory leading up to the election. A key part of
George W. Bush and Karl Rove’s campaign strategy was Issue One, an anti-gay and
domestic partnership amendment spearheaded by Blackwell and Parsley.
In keeping
with Blackwell’s faith-based tally of the Ohio vote, the New Hope precinct
broke new ground. In the now infamous “loaves and fishes” parable precinct
Gahanna 1B, after 638 citizens cast ballots there, the precinct’s divinely
inspired voting machines registered 4,258 votes for George W. Bush.
That absurd
count was later adjusted, but not before Kerry conceded. Blackwell now has the
inside track to the 2006 Republican nomination for governor. Emboldened by
Bush’s controversial win, and by the passage of Issue One, which bans gay
marriage and spousal benefits for unmarried partners of all preferences, the
extremist hate-based fundamentalists may have pushed Blackwell past two more
moderate candidates in the gubernatorial race.
Attorney
General Jim Petro, long known as Ohio’s Republican “enforcer,” and former
Attorney General and current State Auditor Betty Montgomery are rightist
conservatives. But they come up short on the anti-gay anti-abortion litmus
tests being applied by the likes of Blackwell and Parsley. The Columbus
Dispatch reported that Blackwell supporters were referring to Petro as
“pro-homo” and Montgomery and “pro-choice.” Mainstream Republican leaders now
fear their party – and the state – are about to be highjacked by the
Parsley/Blackwell fundamentalist machine unleashed by Bush and Rove.
That move
comes amidst lingering questions about the Bush family’s ties to the voting
machine industry. In 2003, a court case revealed that the VoteHere voting
machine company included on its board of directors former CIA director Robert
Gates, a close Bush family confidante. Connections between the Bush family and
ownership of voting machines have also raised questions about how future
American elections will be decided.
Admiral Bill
Owens is Chair of VoteHere. Owens served as senior military assistant to
Secretaries of Defense Frank Carlucci and Dick Cheney. Carlucci now heads the
notorious Carlyle Group, whose associates include Cheney, George H.W. Bush and
former Secretary of State James Baker, who iced George W. Bush’s victory in
Florida 2000. Georgia has approved the purchase of VoteHere machines. The
military considered them for overseas voting, and the company has planned to
make components for other voting machine companies. Blackwell recently
announced that the partisan Republican firm Diebold, run by one of Bush’s major
donors, CEO Wally O’Dell, will get an unbid contract for all of Ohio’s voting
machines.
Meanwhile, a
bi-partisan Ohio coalition is pushing for a statewide vote on three
constitutional amendments to guarantee that the kinds of irregularities, fraud
and theft that defined Ohio 2004 can never happen again, and that the next
Buckeye State election and vote count might actually be fair and honest. Led by
former Republican Ohio Supreme Court Justice Andy Douglas, former chairman of
the Ohio Democratic Party Paul Tipps, Ohio State political science professor
emeritus Herb Asher and the Ohio Civil Service Employees Association president
Ron Alexander, the campaign is hoping to put three constitutional amendments on
the November 2006 ballot.
One
amendment would remove the Secretary of State from any role in administering
statewide elections. This would outlaw the kind of conflict of interest that
tainted Ohio in 2004, when Blackwell worked as co-chair of the Bush-Cheney
campaign while controlling the state’s vote count, a dual role many believe he
used to wrongly hand Ohio – and the presidency – to George W. Bush.
A second
amendment would create a new five-member redistricting commission. Two members
from each major party and one independent would take responsibility for drawing
up the congressional districts now being controlled by partisan legislatures.
A third
amendment would restrict a new Ohio law allowing corporations to give up to
$10,000 directly to political candidates. The law was rammed through by Ohio
Republicans in an attempt to give wealthy donors a dominant position over labor
unions and grassroots groups in future political campaigns.
This attempt
by many of Ohio’s respected political elders to restore balance, dignity and
reliability to the state’s elections may be the opening salvo of widespread
revulsion against Ohio’s evangelical right-wing corruption and abuse that gave
the 2004 election to George W. Bush.
The
mainstream press is silent no more
Still, the
battle over the bizarre 2004 election results in Ohio continues to rage. Karl
Rove and George W. Bush, with the acquiescence of some Democratic Party
leaders, are orchestrating a cover-up as, simultaneously, shocking new evidence
is emerging and a few mainstream media sources are beginning to report the
story of a possible election theft.
A headline
in the Akron Beacon Journal, for instance, screams: “Analysis Points to
Election ‘Corruption’: Group Says Chance of Exit Polls Being So Wrong in ’04
Vote is One-in-959,000.” This report, signed by 12 statistical scholars and
social scientists, should have sparked more interest in a nation purporting to
be “the world’s greatest democracy.”
The Irish
Times noted that, “The internet is still flickering with allegations of a
conspiracy to steal the election, fueled by the discrepancies between exit
polls that predicted Kerry would win by a margin of 3% and the official results
which saw Bush win by a margin of 2.5%.”
Investigative
reporter Christopher Hitchens’ article “Ohio’s Odd Numbers” in Vanity Fair
stated, “Given what happened in that key state on Election Day 2004, both
democracy and common sense cry out for a court-ordered inspection of its new
voting machines.”
Prior to the
election, Paul Krugman, warned in a New York Times article: “It’s election
night, and early returns suggest trouble for the incumbent. Then, mysteriously,
the vote count stops and observers from the challenger’s campaign see employees
of a voting-machine company, one wearing a badge that identifies him as a
county official, typing instructions at computers with access to the
vote-tabulating software.
When the
count resumes, the incumbent pulls ahead. The challenger demands an
investigation. But there are no ballots to recount, and election officials
allied with the incumbent refuse to release data that could shed light on
whether there was tampering with the electronic records.
This isn’t a
paranoid fantasy. It’s a true account of a recent election in Riverside County,
California . . . .”
The Seattle
Post-Intelligencer reported that presidential candidate John Kerry’s wife
Teresa Heinz Kerry told a Seattle luncheon group that it is “very easy to hack
into the mother machines,” in reference to the commonly used central computer
tabulators that count the votes on Election Day.
Robert
Koehler of Tribune Media Services published perhaps the best piece entitled
“The Silent Scream of Numbers: The 2004 election was stolen, will someone
please tell the media?”
President
Jimmy Carter actually mentioned the “f” word – fraud – recently in the
Washington Post in reference to reforming the U.S. election system.
And even
John Kerry finally acknowledged the obvious when he returned to the site of his
concession speech in Boston and told the League of Women Voters, “Last year too
many people were denied the right to vote; too many who tried to vote were
intimidated.”
Walled off
in Warren County
The Free
Press is printing for the first time a hand-drawn map from an employee of the
Warren County government. The employee, who wishes to remain anonymous for fear
of retaliation, communicated to the Free Press thoughts on what happened on
Election Day in the county that received national attention by declaring a
“homeland security alert” while the votes were being counted.
With the
media and independent election observers “walled off,” as the Cincinnati Enquirer
described, the employee claims that “some ballot boxes were taken to the
holding area” where they were not monitored by election officials. The Warren
County employee referred to the person supervising the unauthorized warehouse
as a “Republican Party hack.”
The employee
is concerned that it would have been easy to “stuff” the ballot boxes or that
“signatures could have been forged in the unauthorized holding area.”
The
anonymous employee told the Free Press that testimony would be provided if subpoenaed.
A list of questions that remain unanswered in Warren County was also supplied:
Which precinct ballot boxes were taken to the unauthorized holding area? Were
officials from the Board of Elections present in the holding area? When were
the ballots taken from the holding area to the check-in tent that was erected
temporarily to count ballots? If Warren County was under a state of emergency,
then why weren’t any metal detectors engaged? The FBI has denied that there was
any homeland security threat on Election Day.
At a
November 18 Cincinnati public hearing investigating Ohio election
irregularities, Liz Kent, a Democratic challenger from Warren County, testified
under oath: “Warren County is the county that at the last minute, they barred
the media from watching the vote counting on election night, claiming there was
a level 10 homeland security threat. . . . The place I was a challenger in was
a precinct that was in an elementary school that was within 300 yards of the
Board of Elections. There was another elementary school directly behind that
which was even closer to the Board of Elections, and we had two precincts
voting in these.
“. . .My
biggest complaint is the fact that no politicians from Warren County ever told
any of the citizens that there was a homeland security threat, that we were of
increased levels. They never used the color system, whatsoever. I talked to a
representative at the Board of Education and they were never told of an
increased threat level to the citizens or could be to the students within 300
yards of the Board of Elections.”
Add to this,
the under oath testimony from Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Toledo and the
Youngstown area regarding the long lines in poor and minority areas on Election
Day, the Mighty Texas Strike Force allegedly threatening and intimidating
would-be voters in addition to a reported 10,000 Republican lawyers and poll
challengers, what emerges is chaotic disruption favoring Bush and Cheney.
The rise of
Rove
Such chaos
has been a long-standing trademark of Karl Rove, Bush’s key campaign
strategist. As James Moore and Wayne Slater write in Bush’s Brain: How Karl
Rove Made George W. Bush Presidential, “Rove and [Lee] Atwater’s plan,
supported by a faction within the College Republicans sometimes called the
Chicago Boys, took as a point of pride its influence on the gears and levers of
the organization.”
“Atwater and
the Chicago Boys decided the best way to win an election was to make sure the
votes that counted were their votes. There was suddenly a flurry of challenges
at the credentials committee, which went into the night,” write Moore and
Slater.
The eerie
similarities between Warren County and Rove’s ascendancy as head of the College
Republicans are further mirrored in a quote by his opponent Robert Edgeworth,
“The credentials committee savagely went through and threw out, often on the
flimsiest of reasons, most of my supporters.”
Prior to
becoming executive director of the College Republican National Committee, Karl
Rove, according to the Washington Post, had been under investigation by George
Herbert Walker Bush for allegedly teaching “political espionage” and “dirty
tricks” during weekend seminars for College Republicans during 1971 and 1972.
Bush the
Elder was then serving as Chair of the Republican National Committee before
going on to represent U.S. interests in China and to direct the CIA. Some
suggest the Rove investigation may have been more in the order of verifying a
promising resume.
Kevin
Phillips, author of American Dynasty: Aristocracy, Fortune And The Politics Of
Deceit In The House Of Bush, offers that dirty tricks and espionage are merely
a standard part of Bush family electioneering “with a four-generation
relationship to the intelligence community and a three-generation tie to the
CIA”
“The late
Lee Atwater, chief political advisor to the elder Bush, and Karl Rove,
strategist for the younger Bush, friends and collaborators, were both devotees
of Machiavelli and the Prince, hardly a coincidence,” Phillips writes.
Phillips, a
key Republican strategist and architect of Richard Nixon’s southern realignment
strategy, notes that, “The Bush’s appear to be a family that approaches a
presidential election as something to be won with a CIA manual, not earned with
commitment to Lincolnian precepts or popular sovereignty.”
Whitewash
with a black face
The current
Bush-orchestrated cover up of Ohio’s presidential election fiasco is fashioned
much like a CIA covert operation. Initially, Bush partisans and media allies
denounced as “conspiracy theorists” anyone who mentioned the irregularities,
probable exit poll results and precinct data suggesting election fraud in
Warren, Clarmont, and Butler counties.
The
emergence of phony non-partisan voting rights organizations mark the second
phase of re-writing Ohio’s 2004 election history. On the afternoon of Friday,
March 18, Ohio Republican Congressman Bob Ney, Chairman of the U.S. House
Administrative Committee, issued a press release announcing a hastily called
hearing investigating Ohio presidential election irregularities.
Little
noticed at the time, except for Brad Friedman at bradblog, was the appearance
of the self-proclaimed voting rights advocate Mark F. (Thor) Hearn, II.
Speaking on the last panel, Hearn claimed to represent the “non-partisan
watchdog” group, the American Center for Voting Rights (ACVR). The name sounded
similar to actual voting rights organizations like the National Voting Rights
Institute. Appearing with Hearn were two Ohio State University Moritz College
of Law professors, Ned Foley, a former Republican-appointed state Solicitor
General, and Dan Tokaji.
On Monday,
March 21, with no opportunity for citizen testimony or any well-known voting
rights organizations to participate, the hearing proceeded at the Ohio
Statehouse with Hearn playing the role of protector of democracy.
What Hearn
failed to tell the Congressional committee was that his organization, the ACVR,
was newly formed and that he was national election counsel to Bush-Cheney ’04.
Also, Hearn’s nonprofit center’s publicist, Jim Dyke, is a former
communications director for the Republican National Committee.
Hearn told
the committee that ACVR was a “voting rights legal defense and education center
committed to defending the rights of voters and working to increase public
confidence in the fairness of the outcome of elections.” He then immediately
identified “massive registration fraud” as Ohio’s key problem.
The former
Reagan administration official proceeded to resurrect an old Gipper trick of
putting a black face on Ohio’s election disaster. Using an isolated incident,
Thor thundered, “. . . while at the NAACP operative Georgiana Pitts’ home, a
‘nicely dressed’ man with a briefcase came to the house to pick-up the voter forms.
During the transaction Chad was asked to step into the other room while Pitts
gave the nicely dressed man the voter registration forms. Ms. Pitts, who paid
Chad the crack cocaine for the fraudulent voter registrations has since turned
up dead from a drug overdose.”
Machiavellian
aficionados know that political perception creates reality. Just like the
Gipper’s infamous quote about a “welfare queen” spitting out babies while on
the dole, Hearn’s intent was to plant the image of the nation’s oldest civil
rights group bribing blacks with cocaine to destroy American democracy.
Hearn and
Rove know that one racist image trumps 100,000 blacks waiting in the rain in
three to seven-hour long lines in Ohio’s urban cities. The Washington Post
estimated between 15-20,000 people left the lines in Columbus alone, after
waiting for hours. The conservative Columbus Dispatch editorial board
immediately dismissed Hearn’s claim as not the real problem.
Foley,
Tokaji and Hearn were all recently named academic advisors to the Commission on
Federal Election Reform, now known as the Carter-Baker Commission.
How Hearn,
who does not list a single academic appointment on his posted resume, and his
last degree was a J.D. in 1986, qualifies as an academic, remains a mystery, as
does the source of the Moritz College Election Law Project funding. On the
Moritz website, there is Hearn’s testimony alongside that of Professors Foley
and Tokaji.
Although
privately admitting that he has no expertise in exit polling, Tokaji has
continued to comment on the irrelevancy of the exit poll discrepancy.
On Friday,
April 15, Cliff Arnebeck, one of the Moss v. Bush attorneys who challenged
Ohio’s presidential results, was disinvited from an Ohio Citizen Action forum
at the Moritz College of Law, sponsored by the Election Law Project.
Had Hearn
been a real non-partisan voting rights advocate, he would have been familiar
with the work of Mike Swinford, who works with Ohio’s Citizens Alliance for
Secure Elections (CASE-OH).
In Knox
County, where Kenyon College students finished voting at 4 a.m. only after a
court order forced the polling site to remain open, it was not blacks who were
engaged in fraudulent voting in the overwhelmingly white county. Swinford found
that at the nearby conservative evangelical Mount Vernon Nazarene College, five
miles from Kenyon, 186 registered voters used the business address of 800
Martinsburg for their voter registration.
Swinford
issued a report noting that: “In Nov 2004, 46 of the 186, voted [having] . . .
no second/mailing address. . . . Using the business address instead of a
resident address violates fed and state law.” The names of all 46 voters
documented in the Knox County Board of Elections records were forwarded to the
Free Press.
Blackwell,
like Hearn, told Rep. Ney’s committee that his key objective was to prevent
“fraud.” Yet, as the co-chair of the Bush-Cheney re-election, the Ohio
Secretary of State has displayed little interest in fraud at right-wing
Republican Christian campuses.
Eyewitness
claims Blackwell busy on Election Day delivering the vote to Bush
A Free Press
reporter was present when Professor Robert Destro, Dean of Columbus School of
Law at Catholic University of America detailed Blackwell’s Election Day
activities at a Lenten presentation. Destro, who claimed to be in the Secretary
of State’s office election night, described Blackwell as “panicky.” He told the
audience that Blackwell believed early in the evening that Bush was losing
Ohio. Figuring Bush had lost the city of Cleveland, Blackwell “began to plot
out with colored magic markers possible voter turnout in suburban counties.”
Destro
relayed the story as a supporter of Blackwell, yet never questioned why Ohio’s
top election officer would be focusing his energies on Election Day towards
getting President Bush elected, while chaos reigned throughout Ohio’s inner
city polling places.
In March
2004, Blackwell had issued a release celebrating the fact that the Secretary of
State’s office for the first time had the capacity for instant data exchange
with the county boards of elections.
Unlike the
exit pollers who predicted Kerry’s victory, Destro attributed Bush’s
statistically improbable and unprecedented win to the morality issues in
suburban Ohio.
Destro is a
board member of the Marriage Law Foundation, set up to provide legal support
and resources against any lawsuits challenging state bans on gay marriage.
Blackwell, as the co-chair of Issue One, which was for constitutionally banning
all forms of domestic partnership in the state, was also busy on Election Day
sending phone messages around Ohio, according to the Associated Press.
Enter Petro
– the Enforcer
Ohio’s
Attorney General Jim Petro, long known as the Republican Party’s enforcer,
jumped into the election fray by seeking to sanction the Moss v. Bush public
interest attorneys.
Petro, first
as State Auditor and now as Attorney General, is running in the gubernatorial
race. In violation of lawyerly protocol, Petro released the announcement
concerning his motion for sanctions against the Moss v. Bush attorneys to the
media, before he notified the attorneys.
Petro told
the media that the Moss v. Bush attorneys needed to be “punished” and the
Attorney General needed some ink in his battle for governor with the legendary
Kenneth “Inkwell.” Petro’s motion to sanction the attorneys appears not to be
motivated by any significant cost incurred to the state of Ohio. Costs were
minimal as Chief Justices Moyer and Maureen O’Connor moved slowly on the matter
making the case moot after Bush’s inauguration.
A public
records request yielded the following information from Petro’s office: Arthur
J. Marziale, Jr., Assistant Attorney General, spent 15.25 hours working on the
Bill Moss v. George W. Bush election challenge, but spent more time, 20.25
hours attempting to sanction the public interest attorneys who filed the case.
In the companion case, Bill Moss v. Thomas J. Moyer, Marziale spent 0 hours
working on the case since Justice O’Connor blocked discovery. Marziale spent
all his time, 7.5 hours, on the motion for sanctions. Also, Richard Coglianese
spent one hour reviewing “Moyer’s sanction motion.”
Blackwell
now looms as an obstacle to the Petro family’s meteoric rise from Brooklyn,
Ohio. Jim Petro’s older brother, J. William Petro, served as co-chair of the
1980 Reagan-Bush campaign in Ohio. He was rewarded with an appointment as U.S.
District Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio in 1982, but was fired
after charges that he leaked confidential information to reputed organized
crime associates. He was found guilty of criminal contempt of court in 1985,
but the former state horse racing commissioner is remembered every year at the
running of the J. William “Bill” Petro Memorial for three-year-old fillies at
Thistledown track.
Early in
April, Erie County Prosecutor Kevin J. Baxter announced an investigation into
whether the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections broke the law during its recount
of ballots in the November presidential election. As the evidence mounts of
another stolen election and the mainstream media slowly begin to unravel the
story, there’s a chance of further, more in-depth criminal investigations.
Blackwell
and his theocratic juggernaut may yet be derailed. Employees and former
employees from the Secretary of State’s office continue to claim that Blackwell
repeatedly violated Help America Vote Act (HAVA) laws. Perhaps Blackwell will
be forced to remain silent as he invokes the Fifth Amendment.
--
Bob Fitrakis
was one of the four attorneys in the Moss v. Bush case. Link to Bob Fitrakis’
speech at the “Who Got Glitched” Election Teach-in in LA:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=203x349367.
1240 Bryden
Road Columbus, Ohio 43209 Ph/Fx 614.253.2571 Email truth@freepress.org
FAIR USE
NOTICE
This site
contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically
authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our
efforts to advance understanding of political, democracy, scientific, and
social justice issues. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such
copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In
accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is
distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in
receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For
more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml. If you
wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that
go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.