By Peter Hannaford on 11.3.08 @ 6:06AM
Why is no one making sure sure our service men and women overseas
are insured the right to vote?
ACORN, the organization whose foot soldiers faked voter
registration applications in Missouri in 2004 and Seattle in
2006, has been in full battle mode this fall, signing up
thousands of previously unregistered voters. Included were Mickey
Mouse and, in Nevada, the starting lineup of the Dallas Cowboys.
In Cleveland one young man was approached by ACORN registrars 73
times and signed up each time for a simple reward of a cigarette
or a dollar bill.
The Secretary of State of Ohio, a Democrat, refused to send
suspect registration applications to county elections offices for
verification. She was ultimately upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court
on a technicality. Meanwhile, ACORN, as it did in previous years,
insisted that all its registrars were properly trained, did not
have quotas to fill in order to be paid (though they were paid
per capita for completed applications), that complaints were
"politically motivated" and that if a few applications were
incorrect they were innocent errors. In other words, they played
the role of the legendary fox in the hen house who said, "Nobody
here but us chickens."
As all this has played out there has been a background chorus of
Democrat, liberal and left-wing operatives insisting that no one
eligible to vote must be denied the right to do so. Their
leitmotif has been that sinister Republicans would, if possible,
"suppress" votes in lower-income areas. Never mind that this is a
chimera; they have repeated it often enough to get some to
believe it.
This chorus, including as it does, many who are anti-military,
has been silent on the matter of making sure our service men and
women overseas are insured the right to vote. An untold number of
these young people are, in fact, in danger of being denied that
right, especially if they are in Iraq or Afghanistan.
This came home to my family this week. We learned from our
grandson, a Lance Corporal in a Marine Combat Engineer unit in
Iraq, that his absentee ballot, requested well over a month ago,
was received by him on Thursday. His parents traced the matter
with the local post office and found it had left there on
September 29. It took a full month to reach him. By mailing it
back this last Friday he has a very slim chance it will reach the
elections office in Arlington, Virginia, in time to be counted.
His parents were told by that office that if it did not reach
them by 5 p.m.. on election day it would not be counted. Thus,
the election office is holding our service men and women overseas
responsible for the behavior of the U.S. Postal Service.
There are two things wrong with this picture. This year there is
a system for armed services personnel overseas to register online
and, in a few states, to vote online. This was not universally
publicized to all units and should have been -- early. Also, the
Department of Defense should have made an all-out effort with all
50 states to get them to accept online voting (with proper
security). To the extent such an effort did not succeed, the DoD
should have secured (by Act of Congress if necessary) to have
overseas military ballots counted, provided they were postmarked,
say, as late as five or seven days before the election day.
Should those working to finish the job of bringing peace and
stability to Iraq be responsible for the efficiency of "snail
mail"? No. Should ACORN be held responsible for all the fake
registrations its workers have perpetrated on the election
system? Yes.