Voting Is the Fundamental Basis of Democracy

Jesse Jackson | 5/8/2020, 7 a.m.
The coronavirus does not discriminate, but people do. The coronavirus is not partisan, but politicians are. When we should be …

The coronavirus does not discriminate, but people do. The coronavirus is not partisan, but politicians are. When we should be coming together to address a shared crisis, some are intent on driving us apart, and on exacting partisan advantage in the midst of the crisis.

Across the country, for example, Republicans are intensifying their efforts to make it harder to vote, with particular focus on suppressing the votes of African Americans and other minorities.

With the pandemic making in-person voting dangerous, Congress should move rapidly to provide the resources to help every state create systems for voting by mail. The first rescue package -- the CARES Act -- included some money for vote-by-mail programs, but far short of the sum that is needed.

Why not provide it? Republicans are worried that voting by mail may increase turnout, particularly among low-income and minority voters. Donald Trump voiced the fear, saying that "They had things, levels of voting, that if you'd ever agreed to it, you'd never have a Republican elected in this country again." Trump made this statement in March, dismissing Democratic efforts to expand mail-in voting, make registration easier, and extend voting days.

Republican voters in states that already have widespread vote by mail support the program overwhelmingly. Some sensibly argue that vote by mail might actually help Republicans this fall, because older voters -- who tend to be more conservative -- are more likely to be reluctant to expose themselves to the virus by going to crowded voting places. But the Republican history -- grounded in the Southern base of the party that has always sought to suppress the vote of blacks -- makes them fearful of efforts to make voting easier for all.

In Wisconsin, we saw the deadly effects of that. Wisconsin Republicans in control of the state legislature blocked the efforts of the Democratic governor to allow widespread vote by mail in the primary. When state election officials were swamped by a staggering demand for absentee ballots, they refused to extend the time for voting, ensuring that thousands never received a response to their request for a ballot. At the same time, officials were slashing the number of voting precincts, worried they'd lack volunteers to staff them. In Milwaukee, the home of two-thirds of the black population in Wisconsin, the number of polling places was reduced from 180 to five. That guaranteed long lines that surely made it impossible for many still at work to vote and put those who did vote at risk. Fifty-two people who went to vote have since contracted the coronavirus.

Closeup of voting pins for 2020 elections.

Closeup of voting pins for 2020 elections.

Simultaneously, conservatives in Wisconsin have joined with Republicans to push purging of the voter lists. From 2016 to 2018, Wisconsin purged 14 percent of the voters on its voting rolls (the national average is about 7.6 percent). In the most recent round, state election officials sent out letters to 232,000 voters who would be removed if they did not respond. One in eight voters in Milwaukee were at risk of being purged. Voters in black neighborhoods were nearly twice as likely to be flagged than those in white neighborhoods.

In Georgia in 2018, the Republican candidate for governor, Brian Kemp, was serving as the state's secretary of state. He sought to purge 300,000 voters -- 4 percent of the electorate. 53,000 voter registrations were put on hold -- 80 percent were people of color. Two hundred voting precincts were closed, predominantly in areas with large black populations. The Democratic candidate, Stacy Abrams, lost the race by a margin far less than the votes that were suppressed.

As she noted, "Especially in states like Georgia, where diversifying demographics have us on the precipice of transformative political change, we are seeing Republicans employ voter suppression to limit who has access to the polls. Disproportionately, under GOP secretaries of state, this process affects Democrats, particularly in communities of color. The clear intention is to strip people of their right to vote."

In state after state, conservative groups are suing states for force purges. The Trump Justice Department has piled on: a June 2017 letter went to 44 states saying it would review how the states were planning to "remove the names of ineligible voters."

Purging voters, blocking vote by mail, requiring official voter ID, closing precincts, limiting early voting, limiting the hours that voting booths are open, blocking same day or automatic voter registration, gerrymandering to segregate the minority vote -- the list goes on.

Voting is the fundamental basis of democracy. Particularly in times of crisis, it is vital that the people's voice be heard. The president and the modern-day Republican Party are convinced that if everyone votes, they will not fare well. Think about that.

Our last presidential election was marred by foreign intervention and WikiLeaks. We couldn't stop that. But we should not steal from ourselves. We cannot allow the coming election to be scarred by homegrown intervention and TrickiLeaks.

You can write to the Rev. Jesse Jackson in care of this newspaper or by email at jjackson@rainbowpush.org. Follow him on Twitter @RevJJackson.