4.08.2006

the black box

Do you remember Kenneth Blackwell? He's the Secretary of State from Ohio who tried his damnedest to throw the presidential election in his key swing state, and largely succeeded. Among other tricks, Blackwell tried to have thousands of new voter registrations disqualified because they were printed on the wrong paper stock according to an obscure, unenforced Ohio law. That was just a particularly egregious move that got a lot of publicity. Tip of the iceberg.

Well, guess what? It's been revealed that Blackwell owns stock in Diebold. The amazing team of Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman, who have been chronicling the recent fraudulent US elections, and sounding the alarm about the next one, have been writing about it:
Ohio is reeling with a mixture of outrage and hilarity as Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell has revealed that he has owned stock in the Diebold voting machine company, to which Blackwell tried to award unbid contracts worth millions while allowing its operators to steal Ohio elections. A top Republican election official also says a Diebold operative told him he made a $50,000 donation to Blackwell's "political interests."

A veritable army of attorneys on all sides of Ohio's political spectrum will soon report whether Blackwell has violated the law. But in any event, the revelations could have a huge impact on the state whose dubiously counted electoral votes gave George W. Bush a second term. Diebold's GEMS election software was used in about half of Ohio counties in the 2004 election. Because of Blackwell's effort, 41 counties used Diebold machines in Ohio's highly dubious 2005 election, and now 47 counties will use Diebold touchscreen voting machines in the May 2006 primary, and in the fall election that will decide who will be the state's new governor.

Blackwell is the frontrunner for Ohio's Republican nomination for governor. The first African-American to hold statewide office, the former mayor of Cincinnati made millions in deals involving extreme right-wing "religious" radio stations.

. . . .

Prior to the 2004 election, Blackwell tried to award a $100 million unbid contract to Diebold for electronic voting machines. A storm of public outrage and a series of lawsuits forced him to cancel the deal. But a substantial percentage of Ohio's 2004 votes were counted by Diebold software and Diebold Opti-scan machines which frequently malfunctioned in the Democratic stronghold of Toledo. Many believe they played a key role in allowing Blackwell to steal Ohio's 20 electoral votes---and thus the presidential election---for Bush. Walden O'Dell, then the Diebold CEO, had pledged to "deliver" Ohio's electoral votes to Bush.

Blackwell has since continued to bring in Diebold machines under other multi-million-dollar contracts. In 2005, while he owned Diebold stock, Blackwell converted nearly half Ohio's counties to Diebold equipment.

Those machines have been plagued by a wide range of problems, casting further doubt on the integrity of the Ohio vote count. A number of county boards of elections are trying to reject Diebold equipment. Two statewide referendum issues on electoral reform were defeated in 2005 in a vote tally that was a virtual statistical impossibility. The deciding votes were cast and counted on Diebold equipment.

. . .

But Ohio Democrats never seriously questioned Blackwell's rigged 2004 vote count that put Bush back in the White House. They've mounted no serious campaign challenging Blackwell's handling of the tally in 2005. They've presented no plan for guaranteeing the integrity of upcoming 2006 November election, which will again be run by Blackwell, even though he may be the GOP nominee.

Attorney-General Petro has become Blackwell's sworn enemy. A rugged campaigner with extensive statewide connections, it's not likely Petro would quietly accept an election being stolen from him. That might explain Blackwell's vehement attacks on his fellow Republican.

But having accused his cohort of widespread corruption, and with a long history of scornful contempt for all those who challenge him, Blackwell's own Diebold revelations have opened a Pandora's Box. What comes flying out could affect state and national politics for years to come.
There's so much more.

Apparently the word in Ohio is that Ken Blackwell will never lose an election in which he is in charge of the vote count.

Once again, the question I am forever asking. If there aren't fair elections, what makes it a democracy?

4 comments:

allan said...

And even if there are only questions and suspicions about the voting process (I wish it were that minor), and both parties go out of their way to ignore the questions and then insult those who ask the questions -- like how can an Ohio county get votes from 128% of registered voters or how did Bush get 4,000+ votes from an area with only 600 voters -- then democracy is dead.

laura k said...

The wingnut response to this is "sore loser" - the Dems can't win an election, so you call foul, nyah nyah.

Like there's not something so much important at stake.

Like the Dems aren't part of this whole charade.

James Redekop said...

My favourite bit in this story was how he claimed that he "accidentally" owned Diebold stock. He didn't realize his people had bought it for him.

As one opponent pointed out, if he can't keep track of his own investments, how can he be qualified to deal with taxpayer money?

laura k said...

I know! Truth or lie, either way, "accidentally" is a pretty poor excuse.