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Subject: Bye bye to Cleveland GOP Election Chair Bob "Ballots for Bush" Bennett
From: Relpo Miraculous
Date: 4/17/2007 9:19:39 PM
Bye bye to Cleveland GOP Election Chair Bob "Ballots for Bush" Bennett
By Harvey Wasserman
Created Apr 16 2007 - 7:53am
by Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Ohio's Bob "Ballots for Bush" Bennett, an essential player in putting George
W. Bush back in the White House in 2004, is no long chair of the Cuyahoga
County Board of Elections. His milestone resignation leaves a legacy of
scandal, recrimination, massive voter purges, felony convictions and a
pivotal role in a stolen presidential election.
Bennett has quit in a signature cloud of graceless accusations and cheap
shots at Jennifer Brunner, Ohio's newly elected Secretary of State, who
asked him to resign along with the rest of the Cleveland election authority.
His forced departure marks the biggest landmark yet in the unraveling theft
of the presidential elections in Ohio 2004.
Bennett remains chair of the Ohio Republican Party. In 2004 he was
apparently asked by White House consigliere Karl Rove to stay on at the
Cuyahoga BOE to help guarantee Bush's second term. Cleveland is Ohio's
biggest and most Democratic urban center. A massive sweep there by John
Kerry was widely expected to have given him the White House. It was
Bennett's job to mute that margin, and apparently that's exactly what he
did.
Leading up to the 2004 vote, Bennett oversaw the quiet purge of some 168,000
registered voters from the Cuyahoga rolls, including 24.93% of the entire
city of Cleveland, which voted 83% for Kerry. In one inner city majority
African American ward, 51% of the voters were purged. Centered on precincts
that voted more than 80% for John Kerry, this purge may well have meant a
net loss to the Democrats of tens of thousands of votes in an election that
was officially decided statewide by less than 119,000.
In a report issued December 7, 2004, the Greater Cleveland Voter
Registration Coalition (GCVRC) reported that in addition to the purge of
registered voters, some 3.5% of those applying for new registrations were
never even entered on the rolls by Bennett's BOE, or were entered
incorrectly, which would result in disenfranchisement of those who had just
tried to become new voters. Additionally, the GCVRC estimated that "over
10,000 voters in Cuyahoga County would be compromised because of these
clerical errors."
Bennett refused to respond to the report's initial conclusions. When the
study became public, BOE Executive Director Michael Vu accused the study
coordinator of "inciting panic." Vu did not respond to GCVRC's request for
the reinstatement of 303 voter registrations where there was direct evidence
that they had been wrongly cancelled.
The GCVRC also documented that the Cuyahoga County BOE incorrectly
classified 463 properly registered voters as not registered. This included
201 voters who were registered on BOE computers on August 17, but for some
unexplained reason, were removed from the rolls by October 22. They then
were forced to vote provisionally and their votes were rejected as not
registered.
In Brunner's formal complaint against Bennett she cited the fact that
Bennett's BOE did nothing when an estimated 10,000 voters were thrown off
the voting roll by a Diebold voter registration computer glitch.
Also, Bennett's BOE rejected 262 properly registered voters included on its
own list as of October 22. They incorrectly listed 183 as not registered and
79 as no signatures. "The Board did not contest our data," said the GCVRC,
"but said again it was just a small percentage due to human error, and then
proceeded to certify the entire Cuyahoga County vote even though they
thereby knowingly possibly disenfranchised 463 individuals."
Parallel purges were conducted by Republican-controlled boards of election
in Hamilton County (Cincinnati) where some 105,000 voters were purged from
the rolls, and in Lucas County (Toledo), where some 28,000 were purged in an
unprecedented move in late August 2004. These remain the only three counties
in the state known to have conducted massive registration purges prior to
the 2004 election. The three mass urban purges decimated the rolls in
heavily Democratic areas. Since then, another 170,000 voters have been
purged from the rolls in Franklin County, primarily in the heavily
Democratic Columbus precincts. Many rural Republican counties, like Miami,
practice a "no-purge" policy.
From his post at the helm of both the Ohio GOP and the Cuyahoga BOE, Bennett
was at the center of the purges. Many of the 300,000-plus purged voters
reported that they never received notice that their voting rights had been
cancelled. Should the general 80% pro-Democratic inner city margins have
prevailed for all three purged lists, the net loss to the Kerry camp could
have been in the range of 100,000 votes.
In addition to the purges, Bennett was also at the center of the election
challenges to college students in Democratic enclaves.
Bennett is infamous for far more than massive voter purges. Under his
supervision, a legally mandated recount of the 2004 presidential vote was
illegally manipulated. Ohio law says precincts must be chosen at random for
hand counting as part of the recount process. But two Cuyahoga BOE employees
have been convicted of a felony and a misdemeanor each, and have each been
sentenced to eighteen months in prison for what prosecutors have called
"rigging" the recount.
Bennett was also instrumental in the purchase of some $20 million in Diebold
voting machines for 2006 statewide elections. Election protection activists
vehemently opposed the purchase, as seen in a nationally televised HBO
special, "Hacking Democracy." Under Bennett and Cuyahoga BOE Executive
Director Michael Vu, the machines malfunctioned in Ohio's 2006 primary, with
vote count reporting delayed for five days.
Long-time election activist Adele Eisner characterizes Bennett's reign at
the Cuyahoga BOE as a "culture with fear." Among other things, Bennett chose
to disregard long-standing laws requiring that election results be posted at
the precinct level, a decision backed by Ohio's former Secretary of State J.
Kenneth Blackwell.
In a recent audit of the general 2006 elections, Dr. Richard Hayes Phillips
found that in the initial vote count, "Cuyahoga County alone accounted for
148,928 undervotes, or 42.47% of the statewide total." The undervotes
occurred in the race for U.S. Senate, where voters apparently opted to not
vote for either incumbent Sen. Mike DeWine or Democrat Sherrod Brown, the
eventual winner. The undervotes represented 26.48% of the county's voters.
But, says Philips, "Once the official results were posted, Cuyahoga's
undervote total fell to 3.25%," leaving him to wonder "how the unofficial
results could have been so erroneous in the first place."
Hayes also found that Cuyahoga County reported 30,791 uncounted absentee and
provisional ballots. After these ballots were counted, they reported 39,262
votes, an outcome Phillips terms mathematically "impossible."
Bennett and Vu were also responsible for more than $12,900,000 in BOE cost
overruns, more than doubling the agency's original budget of $11,000,000.
Vu resigned earlier this year, and has since been hired as an Assistant
Registrar of Voters in San Diego County, the number two spot, with a $10,000
salary increase to $130,000 a year. The San Diego Union-Tribune noted that,
"Vu's resignation followed a tumultuous 3 1/2-year tenure as election chief,
including a disastrous May 2006 primary when the county began using new
electronic voting machines."
In response to the chaos and recrimination, Brunner requested the
resignations of the Cuyahoga board's two Democrats and two Republicans. Only
Bennett vowed to fight his removal.
But he has now become the highest election board official to resign here
amidst the deepening scandals surrounding the 2004 election. He has joined
the growing Republican chorus echoing Rove's line that the Democrats are
preparing to steal the 2008 election.
But Brunner has taken custody of the 2004 ballots and other vote count
materials, which are currently protected by a federal court decision. She is
expected to bring them from Ohio's 88 county boards to a central repository
in Columbus.
Meanwhile, new evidence is emerging that Karl Rove and the GOP had real-time
computer access to both the actual vote numbers in Ohio as well as the exit
polling data that would have allowed them to direct how many votes they
needed from the suspect Ohio southwestern Republican counties that gave Bush
his official margin of victory in the 2004 election. Stay tuned.
_______
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Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107
"A little patience and we shall see the reign of witches pass over, their
spells dissolve, and the people recovering their true sight, restore their
government to its true principles. It is true that in the meantime we are
suffering deeply in spirit,
and incurring the horrors of a war and long oppressions of enormous public
debt. But if the game runs sometimes against us at home we must have
patience till luck turns, and then we shall have an opportunity of winning
back the principles we have lost, for this is a game where principles are at
stake."
-Thomas Jefferson
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Relpo Miraculous
ROFL!
http://www.omencity.com/blog/
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