The Pennsylvania Republican Party filed a lawsuit on Friday
against Secretary of the Commonwealth Pedro Cortes and the
Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) and
its subsidiaries.
The announcement was made at a press conference in the State
Capitol by Pennsylvania Republican State Chairman Robert Gleason.
"With the election being only a couple of weeks away and with
more and more incidents of voter fraud coming to light, we don't
believe that we can trust the results of this election," Gleason
said.
It alleges fraud in the counties of Philadelphia, Allegheny
(Pittsburgh), Delaware (suburban Philadelphia), and Dauphin (in
Central Pennsylvania and site of the state capital of
Harrisburg).
Both ACORN representatives and a representative of Pennsylvania's
Democratic Governor, Obama supporter Edward G. Rendell, were
present at the press conference and opposed the move in separate
presentations of their own.
"ACORN's fraudulent activities threaten to dilute the votes of
millions of Pennsylvania voters by allowing unqualified
individuals to cast ballots and again undermine the voters'
confidence in the electoral process in the upcoming election,"
added retired Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justice Sandra Newman.
"The Republican Party of Pennsylvania is seeking to obtain relief
necessary to ensure that the 2008 General Election is fair, open
and honest manner in order to preserve the ability of qualified
Pennsylvanians to cast votes."
The lawsuit was filed in Pennsylvania's Commonwealth Court. The
suit charges Cortes, a Rendell appointee, with not giving county
officials "timely" data to search the state's computer system to
look for fraudulent voter registrations. It seeks an order
directing the Secretary of the Commonwealth to ensure that the
Statewide Uniform Registry of Elector (SURE) System "provides, in
a timely and efficient manner all Election Officials data about
registrants ineligible to vote, as required by state and federal
law." It also demands that Cortes "ensure that all Election
Officials require identification from all first-time registrants
and also demands that the Secretary provide a significantly
larger amount of provisional ballots at each polling place so
that voters whose voter registration has not been timely
processed by Election Officials on or before the day of the 2008
General Election can vote provisionally."
The state GOP is also asking that ACORN and its subsidiaries be
blocked "from all attempts to encourage voters who have submitted
false or duplicate registration forms from voting or attempting
to vote in the 2008 General Election," and that the court
"directs the ACORN Defendants to provide to the Plaintiffs, the
Secretary and the Election Officials copies of any and all lists
identifying the names of individuals for whom the ACORN
Defendants submitted voter registration forms, and directs the
ACORN Defendants to fund public service announcements to educate
all first time voters about the requirements to present
identification in accordance with state and federal law, whether
voting in person or via absentee ballot."
ACORN officials held their own news conference to accuse the GOP
of "voter suppression" targeting minorities in an effort to deny
them the vote. It claimed it has registered 144,000 new voters in
Pennsylvania with between 60 to 70 percent being identified as
"people of color.
Rendell spokesman Chuck Ardo also spoke to reporters, accusing
Gleason and the other participants in the suit of being
"Republican hatchet men" trying to steer attention from a looming
defeat. He described the GOP suit as whining.
Pennsylvania is considered a "battleground" state in the
presidential election. Both candidates and their running mates
have appeared repeatedly in the state and commercials are
flooding the state's five media markets from Philadelphia in the
Southeast to Pittsburgh and Erie in the West.
The ACORN allegation of "voter suppression" comes in the wake of
a controversial remark by Pennsylvania Democrat Congressman John
Murtha of Johnstown in Western Pennsylvania in which Murtha
painted his own constituents as racist, telling the
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette in an interview that "There is
no question that western Pennsylvania is a racist area." Murtha
later apologized.
Are we clear on all this? The state that chose Hillary Clinton
over Obama in the Democratic primary is filled with racists
because those same voters may actually vote for John McCain. So
the answer is to flood the voter rolls with fraudulent voters who
are "people of color" who may or may not live at any assortment
of vacant lots and empty buildings yet have somehow registered
dozens of times.
And the answer from Governor Rendell?
Hey! No problem!!!!
Jeffrey Lord is a former Reagan White House political director
and author. He writes from Pennsylvania, where he is registered
to vote just once.