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by
Jackson Thoreau, 9-1-03 |
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During
the 2000 campaign before the world went to hell under Bush-Cheney, Rodney
Ellis, a Democratic state senator in Bush-Cheney's home state of Texas,
was asked by some national Democratic officials to travel around the country
saying not-so-nice things about the dangerous corporate hack who now occupies
the White House.
Ellis, an African-American from Houston who once worked
under the late Congressman Mickey Leland, one of many Democrats who have
died in suspicious ways, said he would talk about Bush's rail-thin record,
such as his opposition to a law strengthening action against hate crimes.
But he declined to bash Bush personally.
Now after Bush, Rove and other Republicans have led efforts
to squash minority voting rights in Florida, Colorado, Texas and other
states, Ellis wishes it was early 2000 again. "Now I regret I was so nice,"
Ellis said during a recent conference call with mostly Texas journalists.
Ellis is one of 11 Texas senators who have remained in
New Mexico since July 28 to effectively block a Karl Rove-Bush-Tom DeLay
plan to steal even more seats in Congress. The Republican mafia has whipped
out every dirty trick in the book to get Ellis and other Democrats to
comply with their scheme.
They have tried to arrest them using state and federal
resources. They have fined them as much as $5,000 a day. They have hypocritically
taken them to court as they bash courts and lawyers. They have called
them negative names and said the situation was their fault because they
refuse to "show up for work." Never mind that many Republicans refuse
to show up for work, even when they are supposedly on the job. Never mind
that Republican Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst changed the rules in mid-stream
by doing away with a long-standing rule that two-thirds of senators must
agree for a bill to be debated.
In short, Republicans have done everything they did in
Florida in 2000 and more to get their own way in Texas. And Democrats
have successfully held them off for months.
Some background: Redistricting in Texas is normally done
in years ending with one - for example, 1991 and 2001 - every ten years
right after new U.S. Census numbers are released. In 2001, the Texas Legislature
could not reach a consensus, and new districts were redrawn in court.
After Republicans took control of the Legislature in 2002,
DeLay, Rove and Co. wanted to solidify their power in Congress. So they
hatched a plan to redistrict seats so Republicans would win them more
easily, even though most of those seats are already Republican - voters
just don't like the Republicans who run for Congress in those districts.
This is the first time in Texas history that a party has
made such a re-redistricting attempt in a mid-year without being under
a court order, said Sen. Royce West, another member who left the state.
Among the reasons for this unprecedented Republican redistricting push
is to do away with the section that calls for preclearance in the federal
Voting Rights Act that is up for a vote in 2007. "If Republicans can get
enough support in Congress, that section won't be reauthorized in 2007,"
West said.
It's important for people around the country to understand
that what is happening in Texas and with the California recall election
are not isolated incidents, West said. Those situations are part of a
broader scheme by Rove-Bush-Cheney for Republicans to keep control of
the country for decades. They don't care how many rules and laws they
break in the process.
"You have to connect the dots," said West, an African-American
from Dallas. "It started in Florida [in 2000] and moved to Colorado with
the redistricting by Republicans there earlier this year. It's now in
Texas and California. These are not isolated situations. There needs to
be a national effort against them. I blame Democrats if we don't put up
a defensive and offensive plan."
In Florida, Democrats eventually backed down to Republicans
after putting up a half-hearted fight. I'm still almost as mad at Al Gore
for conceding a victory he rightly won as I am at Bush for stealing that
election. Gore didn't have to EVER concede. He could have refused to accept
the partisan decision by Bush's buddies on the Supreme Court to stop the
legal counting of votes in Florida.
As Democrats.com outlined back then, Gore could have joined
the lawsuits in Seminole and Martin counties, which could have been appealed
to the Supreme Court using the equal protection amendment claim that Bush
employed. He could have joined the lawsuit challenging Cheney's residence,
which was appealed to the Supreme Court. Gore could have lobbied Legislatures
that had Democratic majorities in eight states that Bush won - Alabama,
Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Tennessee,
and West Virginia - to do what the Republican-dominated Florida Legislature
was doing and override the voters in their states, switching their electors
to Gore.
Gore could have asked three Republican electors to switch
to him since in most states such electors were not required by law to
vote for the candidate that voters chose. He could have lobbied Congressional
Republicans to vote with Democrats to refuse to count Florida's 25 electors.
And it didn't fall all on Gore's back. Democrats in the
Florida Legislature could have done what Texas legislators are doing and
left the state when Republicans there vowed to declare Bush the winner
of the state's electoral votes even if the counts somehow went forward
and Gore was rightfully found to be the winner in Florida. Democrats everywhere
could have REFUSED to work with Bush-Cheney.
But most didn't. Some like former Dallas Democratic Party
Chairman Sandy Kress accepted positions under Bush and don't even attend
Democratic functions anymore. Kress has become a Republican. Many more,
from Lieberman to Gephardt, might as well be Republicans.
In January 2001, Gore wouldn't even recognize the few Congress
members who protested the certification of the election by walking out
of the process, as he presided over that process. He could have changed
the rules, as Republicans OFTEN do to suit them, and allowed those protesting
Congress members to speak.
Instead of becoming a college professor, Gore could have
formed a powerful, national organization to work against everything Bush-Cheney
stands for. He could have been a REAL voice of opposition and joined the
few Democrats like Rep. Cynthia McKinney who were really opposing Bush-Cheney.
That's why she was targeted so much by Rove to be smeared and defeated,
which occurred in 2002. That's why strong Democratic voices like the late
Sen. Paul Wellstone, whose suspicious plane crash probably had the involvement
of Republicans, were silenced.
But Gore didn't really fight for the victory he won. Such
a lack of backbone, of doing EVERYTHING to fight for what is right, is
what's really missing among many Democrats.
In Colorado, Democrats could have fled the state last May,
as they did in Texas, to hinder that redistricting process. But they didn't.
Democrats there are now fighting an uphill battle in court to reverse
that process, rather than a proactive, preventive battle as Democrats
are doing in Texas.
In Florida, Gore and Democrats fought for a mere six weeks
before conceding a victory they won to Republicans. In Texas, Democrats
have been fighting for FOUR MONTHS to stop the latest Republican power
play. That's backbone. Take note, Democrats across the land. THIS is how
to fight the Republicans.
Even though they've been fighting Republicans for months,
West, a big guy and former college football player, said the battle has
just begun. He vows to remain out of Texas through a third special session
and so on. "If you use a football analogy, we're only in the second quarter,"
he said. "This is a long way from being over."
Take note, Gore. THAT'S how you fight. You don't just do
it for a few weeks, then concede. You don't try to take the high road.
Republicans are going to spin things against you and accuse you of playing
dirty even if you don't. So you might as well play hardball and win a
few victories for a change.
First, House Democrats in May, then senators in July, fled
out of state to keep the redistricting plan from being considered. Texas
Republican Gov. Rick Perry, who gets his marching orders from Rove and
co., has called two special sessions for redistricting, wasting almost
$4 million in a year in which Republicans cut billions from health and
human service programs such as health insurance for lower-income children.
Perry has vowed to call a third session and even move the primary voting
dates to get the redistricting scheme in place by next year. He doesn't
care how much money he wastes.
MoveOn.org has showed its appreciation of Texas Democrats
by raising $1 million for a national media campaign to raise awareness
about the situation. The best thing that can happen is that Democratic
politicians throughout the U.S. enact similar tactics as the Texans, who
have succeeded in stopping Republicans in their filthy tracks where Dems
in Florida and Colorado failed.
Ellis and West represent a growing number of Democrats
who tried to play with Republicans only to find that they cheat to win.
They are not radicals in the sense of Malcolm X, though they have always
found ways to stand up for justice. Ellis was president pro tem of the
Texas senate for two years and is chairman of the Senate Government Organization
Committee. West was the first African-American chief felony prosecutor
in Dallas County and is vice chairman of the Senate Education Committee.
"They pushed us over the edge," Ellis said. "People
are just not going to disrespect us."
Ellis is particularly incensed by the fines imposed by
Republican. "We have no intention of paying those fines," he said. "Republicans
in the Senate and Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst betrayed [former] President
[Lyndon] Johnson's legacy by voting to impose a new poll tax on minority
members of the senate, and those that represent minority communities....It
is a racial issue. Most of us who were targeted with those fines are minority."
The Democratic Party is starting to get some backbone,
West observed. "We have some real differences between our parties, and
we will draw that distinction [in the 2004 elections]," he said.
Some Democrats in New Mexico, where the party controls
the state Legislature, are discussing redrawing Congressional seats to
combat the Republican efforts. Hopefully, Democrats in more states are
making similar plans.
I haven't heard of any real efforts to recall Republican
governors, beyond petitions against Perry. But perhaps there are some
efforts I haven't heard about - I hope so. I sure hope that if Enron-Rove
puppet Arnold Schwarzenegger prevails in California's recall election,
Democrats there IMMEDIATELY implement a petition drive to recall the groping
Robot Man. Almost 700 people have signed an Internet petition I began
to recall Schwarzenegger at http://www.petitiononline.com/schwarze/petition.html.
I sure hope that some Congress members initiate proceedings to expel dirty
trickster DeLay - almost 2,000 people have signed the petition against
DeLay that I started at http://www.petitiononline.com/tdl0000/petition.html.
Another positive sign is that even the mainstream late-night
comedians like Leno and Letterman are becoming more aggressive against
Bush and other Reps. Here's one from Letterman: "The White House says
that the vacation in Texas will give Bush the chance to unwind. My question
is, when does the guy wind?" Here's one from Leno: "Bush's economic team
is now on their jobs and growth bus tour all across America. I think the
only job they created so far is for the guy driving the bus."
Here's another from Leno: "The United States is putting
together a Constitution now for Iraq. Why don't we just give them ours?
It's served us well for 200 years, and we don't appear to be using it
anymore, so what the hell?"
Besides Iraq, the terrible economy and the crackdown on
constitutional liberties, another issue to pound Bush on is how he is
closing Veterans Affairs hospitals throughout the country and reducing
services for vets, especially in areas like mental health and substance
abuse, as he spends billions every day to occupy Iraq and Afghanistan.
One prominent Texas veteran who supported Bush in 2000 told me: "Veterans
got Bush in office through the military write-in votes in Florida. And
veterans may get Bush out of office."
There is so much anger against Bush, even from supporters,
that you can't help but think another Sept. 11 event will occur soon to
divert people's anger. That's another diabolical way Bush and other Republicans
plan to stay in office.
But we'll keep fighting. Hopefully, more people, like Sen.
Ellis, have learned their lesson the hard way about working with and being
too nice towards Republicans.
Jackson Thoreau is an American writer and co-author of
We Will Not Get Over It: Restoring a Legitimate White House. The updated,
120,000-word electronic book can be downloaded on his Internet site at
http://www.geocities.com/jacksonthor/ebook.html.
Citizens for Legitimate Government has the earlier version at http://www.legitgov.org/we_will_not_get_over_it.html.
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