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Rev. Al Sharpton

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Cheaters Never Win

Posted: 08/07/2012 1:55 pm

When a poor sport realizes they may be losing, what do they do? More often than not, they figure out a way to cheat. In politics, things are no different. Facing the reality of an ever-diversifying electorate, and their own party's failure to broaden its horizons, some Republican lawmakers have resorted to implementing tricks and roadblocks in the voting process. Strict voter ID laws have taken effect in states across the country with the potential to disenfranchise millions of eligible voters in key battleground states. Before we find ourselves in a repeat of Bush v. Gore, we must educate, empower, organize and combat these systematic efforts to suppress our vote. Advocates of new ID legislation may think they have the public fooled; tell them to think again.

Today I am in the all-important state of Florida as part of my Voter Engagement Tour. Notorious for contested elections, the sunshine state is unfortunately on course for purging an outrageous number of citizens from voting, and systematically excluding countless others with new voter ID requirements. Out of 37 million votes cast in Florida, only 178 allegations of voter fraud emerged -- that's .0005% for those who are trying to calculate. And out of the hundreds of thousands of voters on the purge list, 87% are minority voters. Former Florida Republican Party chairman Jim Greer even admitted in a deposition that he "was upset because political consultants and staff were talking about voter suppression and keeping Blacks from voting," according to the Tampa Bay Times.

In the state of Pennsylvania, a legal challenge to voter ID laws is in the courts as we speak, with a ruling expected early next week. Gov. Tom Corbett refers to new requirements as a "law of prevention," and claims that 99% of eligible voters have the appropriate ID under these new regulations. The reality is that about 9.2% of Pennsylvania voters (758,000) do not possess the kind of ID needed under these tough new laws. And if we ever had any doubt as to the motive of the individuals pushing and advocating such rules, State House Republican leader Mike Turzai summarized it best himself when he openly said voter ID laws will "allow" Mitt Romney to win the state in Nov.

Folks, I've said it before, and I'll say it again, voter ID laws are a solution looking for a problem. When there are 13 cases of voter fraud out of 31 million votes cast in the state of Pennsylvania -- .0004% -- and the response is creating mechanisms to keep hundreds of thousands excluded from voting, we have a serious dilemma. And it isn't only in states like Florida and Pennsylvania; this is happening right now all across this nation and unfortunately expanding. That's precisely why I will be heading to California later this week. Currently without these new voter ID laws, California (like everywhere else) will still be impacted by what takes place in states that do have the harsh requirements in place because their results will have very real consequences in both the popular and electoral count. And California's residents understand the potential of these laws also eventually reaching them because the fact remains that it's Florida today and it could be your state tomorrow.

The 2012 election is fast approaching. If we do not empower voters, they may be in for a surprise this November. After somehow failing to enact such voter ID laws during their own primaries, GOP leaders now feel there must be immediate legislation that enforces ID requirements prior to the upcoming Presidential election. But we will not be fooled; nor will we passively sit and watch as our fundamental rights are trampled upon. Instead of creating methods of appealing to minority groups in this country and recruiting more to their Party, Republicans have resorted to tactical strategies of covertly blocking the vote. Perhaps these poor sports should remember that in the end, cheaters just never win

 

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When a poor sport realizes they may be losing, what do they do? More often than not, they figure out a way to cheat. In politics, things are no different. Facing the reality of an ever-diversifying...
When a poor sport realizes they may be losing, what do they do? More often than not, they figure out a way to cheat. In politics, things are no different. Facing the reality of an ever-diversifying...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sistagirl Young
06:49 AM on 08/17/2012
If one has voted all their lives, without an ID; why would they start demanding one now? Who would be hardest hit by implementation of such an act or law? Those most impacted would be voting for whom? Makes sense to me. But just because something makes sense doesn't make it right. Life.
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BBRCMOR11
No added sugar...
05:57 AM on 08/17/2012
it
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BBRCMOR11
No added sugar...
05:56 AM on 08/17/2012
Cheating in America is as popular as apple pie and baseball ( as in the sport where many athletes take modified substances in order to enhance performance and achievement). Let's see there is: the 2004 national election (biggest cheating incident in recent history), SAT scandals, tax cheats, welfare cheats.. and on and on.

It seems to me that cheaters really believe that is PAYS to cheat.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CMB1969
raging moderate
10:24 PM on 08/12/2012
In 1995, I moved from North Carolina to Astoria, NY (burrough of Queens, across from Manhattan) as a young 20-something professional. Registered to vote as a republican--more due to family background then ideology or consistent voting patterns (I voted for Bill Clinton in 1992).. For the next couple of years, I received periodic "ballot security" letters demanding that I write back to confirm that I still lived @ my same address and got told that my registration "could not be verified" when I showed up to vote in the 1996 election--I had to do one of those provisional affidavit ballots. I finally got tired of the nonsense & sent in a new voter registration form that listed my party affiliation as 'non-affiliated'--the hassle from the (Democratic-controlled) burrough administration stopped abruptly. Suffice it to say, voter harassment is a two-way street.
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Davewaybe
Life gives us time only love gives us meaning
09:05 AM on 08/12/2012
Cheaters never win?

You would do well to remember that Mr Sharpton......... distorting and sensationalizing is also a form of cheating!
05:59 AM on 08/11/2012
As a Californian is there anything my friends and I can do about this block the vote?
-Watching helplessly from Hollywood
10:09 AM on 08/10/2012
Most will agree that Rev. Al is one of the best debaters around, but the Rev is wrong on this one. In this world ran by Goldman Sachs, not governments, cheaters do win; and they win BIG.
40s
An inconvenient truth still is.
01:14 AM on 08/10/2012
I will offer this. Why don't all States provide an ID for free to the poor who don't have a drivers license? All they have to do is sign an affidavit swearing they make less than whatever the federal poverty level is.. I'll pay an extra $1 for my DL so we can provide this. They are going to need it to use their new O-care anyway. If we would look for common-sense/ common-ground solutions instead of running to the opposite corners shouting"racist poll tax" and "voter fraud" this kind of cr@p disappears. The truth is many enjoy the shouting and finding actual solutions would make them irrelevant.
06:52 PM on 08/09/2012
Guess that means Obama loses in November.
08:29 AM on 08/10/2012
No YOU lose!
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withoutaparty
Fodder for the 24hr news cycle: YOU!
03:11 PM on 08/09/2012
I have an ID to prove I'm old enough to drink. (privilege)
Same one can be used to operate a car. (privilege)
Get a job? (privilege)
Buy a gun? (right, but need ID)
Protest? (right, but if they ask for ID and I don't give it I'll probably be arrested)
Vote? ...nah. Never you mind!

If Holder can have his vote cast for him, what makes the rest of us so immune?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jessica Holiday
Social Liberal - Fiscal Conservative
12:26 PM on 08/09/2012
If cheaters never win, how is Geithner the Treasury Secretary overseeing the IRS?
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withoutaparty
Fodder for the 24hr news cycle: YOU!
04:05 PM on 08/09/2012
Hah! Already had you fanned.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GroveGal10
chillin' on Biscayne Bay
10:40 AM on 08/09/2012
I am sickened by the extent the GOP will go to to win elections in this country. Knowing they can't do it the old-fashioned way because people want them in office, they are resorting to taking away the right every person in this country has to vote. I am appalled - simply appalled - it has gone this far. If something isn't done to help these minority groups get into poll booths, this corruption begun by the GOP will go down in history as the raping of America.
10:33 AM on 08/09/2012
this is a recipe for anarchy like the kind of bloody demonstrations that occurred in Greece recently, since the populace will not accept results that are derived from phony electoral tricks, not to mention the chaos on Election Day, maybe that's what the GOP wanted all along, as part of its circular reasoning
08:22 AM on 08/09/2012
empower voters huh--cute considering congress spends time investigating a baseball pitcher as if that was a national priority problem.i don`t recall a national outcry about that problem.
cheaters--uhhhh--take a poll al--if you dare--ask your constituents if your fellow politicians are in the top 2 group of cheaters. ohhhhh--i forgot, congress makes laws that don`t apply to congress, but just to the empowered people that elect them. lets hear some statistics on the number of people that have quit voting due to disgust compared to being under empowered--oopps--disenfranchised.how about some solutions to black on black crime that don`t cost taxpayers more taxes for congress to squander on the same solutions that have solved nothing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JsLkinHere
01:10 AM on 08/09/2012
Seriously, Democrats need to give it a rest on this subject. Any American over the age of 18 should possess two pieces of identification, one of which is a picture ID. If a person cannot afford an ID, surely they belong to a religious group, social group, elderly care group, etc. that can provide the nominal fee to get one. I know state ID cards cost $40 here in MA.
10:35 AM on 08/09/2012
NO, people in a free society should have ID provided them FREE of charge, at least the originals but replacements may be nominally priced and the electoral process should be managed by the government, not the political parties themselves, take a look at Elections Canada on the web to see how a progressive democracy is managed
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jessica Holiday
Social Liberal - Fiscal Conservative
02:50 PM on 08/09/2012
So... Whose going to pay for those Free ID's?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JsLkinHere
03:07 PM on 08/10/2012
I agree, but that's not how it works today.  You have to pay to get a copy of your birth certificate today, when it used to be free years ago.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GroveGal10
chillin' on Biscayne Bay
10:57 AM on 08/09/2012
Wow - you are clueless about the poverty some people live in and yet they have every right to vote. Try and find a little compassion for all levels of our society.