Statement on Voter Disenfranchisement in the 2000
Elections
The Association of State Green Parties
calls for an investigation of the alleged
irregularities in Florida and other states, especially the
alleged disenfranchisement of many African Americans
and other people of color and physical disabilities.
These include: reports of intimidation
and obstruction by crowds and officials, lack of
ballots and working voting machines, refusal if assistance
and foreign language translation to voters, failure to
process registration and ballots, requiring a stamp on
voter registration cards, the lack of ballots in Braille and
access ramps to voting places, electioneering, and
other errors and omissions affecting the rights of
voters.
The presidential election stalemate in
Florida reveals that voter fraud, manipulation, and
intimidation against African American may not have
ended with passage of civil rights laws, and sheds
lights on some of the same practices used against
Latinos, American Indians, immigrants, and poor whites in
some states. The Association of State Green Parties
condemns all such assaults on the democratic rights of
thousands of voters.
The Association of State green Parties
supports the demand of the Congressional Black Caucus
that the Justice Department investigate these allegations
as possible violations of the constitutional rights of
thousands of Americans and as abuses of the 1965 Voting
Rights Act.
The Association of State Green Parties
calls for the investigation of allegations of
disenfranchisement of voters in the armed forces.
The Association of Sate Green Parties
also condemns the disenfranchisement of convicted
felons, according to the laws of certain states, which
has resulted in the ethnic engineering of elections.
The disproportionate incarceration of people of color
and the War on Drugs, under which hundreds of thousands of
Americans have been imprisoned for minor and nonviolent
offenses, are monstrous injustices which must
cease.
The Association of State Green Parties
demands that Americans convicted of felonies or any
other offenses who have served their sentences have their
full voting rights restored.
Because of the many injustices found in
today's US-criminal-justice system, particularly the War on
Drugs, the suspension of voting rights for all other
prisoners needs to be discussed openly in public.
Already on record opposing the War on
Drugs, which addresses drug use and addiction as a
legal and military crisis instead of a socioeconomic and
health issue, the Association of State Green Parties
asks all Americans to recognize the War on Drugs as a
cruel and unjust tactic to deprive millions of Americans,
especially people of color and the poor, of their
constitutional rights, including the right
to vote.
The Association of State Green Parties
continues to demand equitable redistricting, enactment
of Instant Runoff Voting and other election reforms, and
closer monitoring of elections to increase
participation of Americans in the electoral
and political system.
Email: info@greenpartyus.org
Office: PO Box 57065 Washington, D.C. 20037 Toll-Free:
866-41GREEN
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