Saturday, March 14, 2009

Things to think about of Elections



The art of stealing elections



By Robert Kuttner | October 20, 2004

THE REPUBLICANS are out to steal the 2004 election -- before, during, and after Election Day. Before Election Day, they are employing such dirty tricks as improper purges of voter rolls, use of dummy registration groups that tear up Democratic registrations, and the suppression of Democratic efforts to sign up voters, especially blacks and students.

On Election Day, Republicans will attempt to intimidate minority voters by having poll watchers threaten criminal prosecution if something is technically amiss with their ID, and they will again use technical mishaps to partisan advantage.

But the most serious assault on democracy itself is likely to come after Election Day.

Here is a flat prediction: If neither candidate wins decisively, the Bush campaign will contrive enough court challenges in enough states so that we won't know the winner election night.

The right stumbled on a gambit in 2000, which could become standard operating procedure in close elections: If the election ends up in the courts, all courts eventually lead to the Supreme Court, which, as we learned, can overrule state courts -- and pick the president.

This year is even more ripe for abuse, because the 2002 Help America Vote Act, a "reform" written substantially to Republican specifications, toughened ID requirements. It also gave voters a right to cast "provisional" ballots if their names are missing from the rolls. Good impulse, but someone, ultimately a court, must decide whether they should have been permitted to vote, and that's almost impossible to resolve on Election Day.

In addition, states are experimenting with a variety of new voting systems, to avoid a repeat of the technical glitches that made it easy for Republicans to steal Florida in 2000. And experiment is the right word; much of this technology isn't ready for prime time.

In our voting systems, we now have a witches' brew of 19th-century local amateurism married to 21st-century technology that is not yet reliable. The technical mess functions as an enabler of the assault on voting.

There was a time when Democrats were the party that occasionally stole elections. Lyndon Johnson very likely stole his 1948 victory in the Texas Democratic primary, which launched his Senate career. President Kennedy actually joked about the notorious vote rigging in Chicago, which quite possibly tipped Illinois to him in 1960. (He would have won the Electoral College very narrowly without Illinois.)

It was Richard Nixon, that scoundrel's scoundrel, who resisted the temptation to mount a court challenge to the Illinois result because he felt the country couldn't take it. Imagine longing for the days when we had Republican leadership as principled as Nixon's.

But the days of urban Democratic machines that voted dead people are long gone. The press has reported isolated abuses, such as a few Florida snowbirds trying to register in more than one state. But any fair comparison of election abuses this year will reveal that one party is expending energy to register as many supporters as possible and assure that that their votes will be counted, while the other one is registering its supporters but also systematically trying to keep the opposition's votes from being cast. There is simply no comparable Democratic program of ballot suppression.

Maybe we should invite election observers from Afghanistan and Iraq.

We may not know the winner until the Electoral College meets in December, and perhaps not even then if contested elections are still tied up in court. It's not even clear whether the ultimate arbiter would be the Supreme Court or the House of Representatives.

If the courts took away the people's right to choose the president, and George Bush in effect stole two elections in a row, this would surely produce a constitutional crisis and a crisis of legitimacy.

But what if they gave a constitutional crisis and nobody came? The most ominous outcome of all would be public passivity, echoing 2000. That would confirm that the theft of our democracy was real.

Call me partisan, but the best insurance against this horrific outcome would be a Kerry win big enough so that even Karl Rove would not dare to mount this maneuver. A razor-thin race virtually invites it. And if Bush wins handily, our democracy will have other problems.

Robert Kuttner is co-editor of The American Prospect. His column appears regularly in the Globe.
© Copyright 2006 Globe Newspaper Company.

http://www.boston.com/news/



Friday, March 13, 2009

If you find a funny face in your comic book, it won't be Najib's!






It looks like public opinion, online, swoons over the Sleepwalker! The SeeFour Buster is well out of the league!

Something wrong in the Stars! Must be the global warming! ;)



But Pak Lah is Hot!!! He maybe a sleepwalker but the Girls thinks he is steaming. Hotlah !!! Look!




Pak Lah's ex Boss thinks he's hot, too!


Former Umno supremo and premier Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad(pic) said today it did not necessarily follow that the president of Umno should become the prime minister of the country, as this is not provided in the Federal Constitution.

"It has merely been a practice for us in Umno," he said, in answer to a question from the press on whether it was possible that the planned power transition from Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi to his deputy Datuk Seri Najib Abdul Razak may not take place.

www.thesundaily.com


But Najib has fans, too!


Here's His No.1 Fan ...



She thinks it's Najib's destiny to be PM !

What do I think?


Well, if you see a rocket ship on its way to Mars, Najib maybe on it! ;)

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Keeping them honest: A batang and two bukits




The Batang Ai Constituency in Sarawak, the batang with the two bukits, Selambau and Gantang, will be facing bye-elections with polling scheduled for 7th April. Compared with the two bukits, Batang Ai is so deep in the interior of Borneo that if you lose your way you'd be in the rural areas of Indonesia. The BN won Batang Ai previously, whilst the PR held both Bukit Selembau and Gantang. The PR has to exert all resources to maintain the present edge of denying BN two-thirds Parliamentary majority. Many have speculated BN will win Batang Ai hands down by rolling out the dough (RM4.0 mil as speculated by Sim Kwang Yang) and not exerting too much resources and thereby posing PR much risks in Selambau and Gantang. But no one will be complacent. The biggest risks is the use of money spooking greater corruption in the election process.

MAFREL, an election watch dog is presently beset with problems - management, institutional reincorporation, election abuses claimed to have occurred and reports not attended to. This sets up the scene as pretty for BN who'll stop at nothing to win an election as in KT Bye-Election, where The Government Ministry of Information staff was distributing cash in envelopes to media people; and Permatang Pauh where cash was openly handed out.

In Kuching last week, after "tahlil prayers" politics was not taboo. A retired Malaysian Information Services officer related an incident of an off duty Policeman accidentally discovering ballot boxes in a room during Sulaiman Taib's election as MP. Nobody breathed a word. In Sabah, same thing on ballot boxes happened, found by on the banks of some river; nothing happened. All these are no doubt undocumented and therefore unproven but the rakyat will keep silent with a knowing smile.

It is quite apparent that if civil action by all and sundry including that of MAFREL, could be harnessed and managed well, we could keep BN honest. But keeping them honest is a long haul, as the systems have aged 50, the worms will not come out of the woodwork, if we don't shake up the hangover after the long malaise.




Some pix of Batang Ai, and ample grace in the music and dance of the Dayaks







The abuses I was referring to in Permatang Pauh.





Pix from MAFREL and "discordantdude" [Youtube]
on which report is not forthcoming.
Ng Yen Yen doles out cash!