President Obama’s Justice Department is doing its part to
maximize the Democratic turnout in the 2012 elections by filing
“motor voter” suits across the country that claim state officials
are not circulating voter registration forms in social service
agencies.
The lawsuit
filed against Louisiana this past summer is closely timed with
a separate suit advanced by ACORN’s Project Vote affiliate and the
NAACP. Gov. Bobby Jindal’s top officials have vowed to put up a
vigorous fight, but other states including Rhode Island have rolled
over to accept agreements that go beyond the scope of written
law.
Anita MonCrief, a former Project Vote employee turned
conservative activist, warns that the consent agreements that are
becoming operative throughout the country will preclude state
officials from moving against potential instances of voter
fraud.
Under Section 7 of the National
Voter Registration Act (NVRA), commonly known as “motor voter,”
state health and welfare agencies are required to circulate voter
registration forms. Under Section 8, state officials are required
to clean and update their voter rolls by purging the names of
deceased residents, felons and anyone else who is ineligible.
Sen. David Vitter (R-LA) has sent a letter addressed to Attorney
General Eric Holder asking the department to enforce Section 8.
“The Department later filed a lawsuit against Louisiana alleging
that the state has violated its obligations under Section 7 of the
NVRA,” he wrote. “However, at the same time, absolutely no effort
is being made to enforce Section 8 of the same law. Section 8
requires states to conduct voter roll cleaning to purge ineligible
felons and dead voters from corrupting the election process.
The two provisions act together as counterparts, but it is evident
that the Justice Department is not enforcing them equally.”
But there’s a problem.
Obama’s Justice Department is “philosophically opposed” to
enforcing that part of the law that calls for voter registration
rolls to be purged of ineligible names, J. Christian Adams,
and former attorney in the DOJ’s Voting Section, said during a
forum Tulane University Law School in November. A full report on
his talk is available at the
Pelican Institute for Public Policy blog.
The Justice Department’s “selective enforcement” of the NVRA is
a major of theme of a new book by Adams entitled “Injustice:
Exposing the Racial Agenda of the Obama Justice Department.”
He also describes an “industry of voter fraud deniers” that
could give the left a decided advantage in the 2012 elections.