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Old 11-01-2005, 09:29 AM
TonyB06 TonyB06 is offline
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ajc.com>Opinion>Tucker

MY OPINION
GOP wields a poll ax against voters of color
Published on: 10/30/05

Last week, an ugly bit of business transpired in the GOP-dominated House of Representatives, where Republican hardliners succeeded in passing a measure that would limit the ability of nonprofit groups to conduct voter registration drives. It was one of those moments when you don't have to wonder what the jihadist faction of the GOP is up to: they want to restrict the franchise to people who think as they do.

This heavy-handed step was of a piece with other Republican efforts to place obstacles in the way of voters they fear may favor Democrats. In Georgia, the GOP-dominated Legislature passed a law earlier this year requiring all voters to have a state-sponsored photo ID, such as a driver's license. Because it may be an unconstitutional impediment to voting, a federal judge halted implementation of the law. In South Dakota, Republican legislators were more successful with their onerous voter ID requirement, passed in 2003 and apparently aimed at Native Americans, who also tend to support Democrats. Last year, though, two Republican senators, Kit Bond of Missouri and Richard Shelby of Alabama, failed in their attempt to sneak a provision into law that would have prohibited public housing sites from hosting voter registration initiatives and get-out-the-vote drives.

Last week's partisan power play took the form of an amendment tacked onto a piece of legislation intended to increase regulatory oversight of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the mortgage financing companies recently plagued by accounting scandals. The House bill included a sorely needed provision to create a fund for affordable housing, prompted by calls for federal aid to rebuild the Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina. But to placate an ultraconservative group called the Republican Study Committee, an amendment was added that prohibits any nonprofit group from receiving any of the federal affordable-housing funds if it has conducted a voter registration campaign in the past year, even if it has used its own funds to do so.

This is not a poll tax. This is a poll ax. If this measure becomes law — the Senate has not yet acted on it — it will penalize countless organizations, including churches, that have run voter registration drives and also built high-rises for the elderly and low-cost apartment complexes that accommodate store clerks, janitors and fast-food workers.

Republicans seem to think that residents of low-cost housing, especially black and brown residents, have a tendency — one they find troubling — to vote Democratic. You'd think the GOP would find a way to appeal to those voters. But that would require the party to forsake its allegiance to Big Business and the wealthy. So, instead, it has decided to try to suppress the vote among citizens of color.
— Cynthia Tucker is the editorial page editor.

read the rest here:
http://www.ajc.com/opinion/content/o...ker/index.html
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