Statement on Disenfranchisement of voters in the 2000 Election -
June, 2000
The Association of State Green Parties calls for
an investigation of the alleged irregularities in Florida and other
states, especially the alleged disenfranchisement of many African
Americans and other people of color and physical disabilities.
These include: reports of intimidation and obstruction by crowds and
officials, lack of ballots and working voting machines, refusal if
assistance and foreign language translation to voters, failure to
process registration and ballots, requiring a stamp on voter
registration cards, the lack of ballots in Braille and access ramps to
voting places, electioneering, and other errors and omissions
affecting the rights of voters.
The presidential election stalemate in Florida reveals that voter
fraud, manipulation, and intimidation against African American may not
have ended with passage of civil rights laws, and sheds lights on some
of the same practices used against Latinos, American Indians,
immigrants, and poor whites in some states. The Association of State
Green Parties condemns all such assaults on the democratic rights of
thousands of voters.
The Association of State green Parties supports the demand of the
Congressional Black Caucus that the Justice Department investigate
these allegations as possible violations of the constitutional rights
of thousands of Americans and as abuses of the 1965 Voting Rights
Act.
The Association of State Green Parties calls for the investigation of
allegations of disenfranchisement of voters in the armed forces.
The Association of Sate Green Parties also condemns the
disenfranchisement of convicted felons, according to the laws of
certain states, which has resulted in the ethnic engineering of
elections. The disproportionate incarceration of people of color and
the War on Drugs, under which hundreds of thousands of Americans have
been imprisoned for minor and nonviolent offenses, are monstrous
injustices which must cease.
The Association of State Green Parties demands that Americans
convicted of felonies or any other offenses who have served their
sentences have their full voting rights restored.
Because of the many injustices found in today's US-criminal-justice
system, particularly the War on Drugs, the suspension of voting rights
for all other prisoners needs to be discussed openly in public.
Already on record opposing the War on Drugs, which addresses drug use
and addiction as a legal and military crisis instead of a
socioeconomic and health issue, the Association of State Green Parties
asks all Americans to recognize the War on Drugs as a cruel and unjust
tactic to deprive millions of Americans, especially people of color
and the poor, of their constitutional rights, including the right to
vote.
The Association of State Green Parties continues to demand equitable
redistricting, enactment of Instant Runoff Voting and other election
reforms, and closer monitoring of elections to increase participation
of Americans in the electoral and political system.