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Mich. GOP Targets Foreclosure Victims for Election Day Dirty Tricks

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Cross-posted at Project Vote's Voting Matter's Blog

Weekly Voting Rights News Update

By Erin Ferns

Partisan political operatives in Michigan are taking voter caging operations to depths that would surprise even the most cynical observers of American elections. If their plans are put into action, thousands of Michigan foreclosure victims may find that they will not only have lost their homes this year, but also their vote.


Operatives
in the closely contested state, which is home to thousands of
homeowners facing foreclosure, are "gearing up for a comprehensive
voter challenge campaign," according to Eartha Jane Melzer of the Michigan Messenger
Wednesday. The state allows parties to send election challengers to
polls to challenge the eligibility of voters if they "have good reason
to believe" a voter is ineligible. In this case, the GOP of Macomb
County—a "key swing county" with a foreclosure rate in the top three
percent in the nation—has announced plans to challenge the voting
eligibility of foreclosure victims based on residency.

"We will have a list of foreclosed homes and will make sure people aren’t voting from those addresses," Macomb County GOP chairman James Carabelli told the Messenger.

J. Gerald Herbert, a former voting rights litigator for the U.S. Justice Department, questions what he calls a "mean-spirited" and possibly legally-baseless tactic: "You can't challenge people without a factual basis for doing so...I don't think a foreclosure notice is sufficient basis for a challenge, because people often remain in their homes after foreclosure begins and sometimes are able to negotiate and refinance."

Teresa James, attorney for Project Vote, agrees. In a statement released today, James explains that Michigan law allows challenges at the polls only if the challenger "knows or has good reason to suspect" a voter is ineligible. According to James, the Michigan Secretary of State has clarified this to require that challenges should be based on "reliable sources or means."

"Republican challengers with only a list of foreclosure notices will have NO evidence or reliable source to suggest that eligible voters have moved and are no longer eligible to vote," says James.

"The Macomb County party's plans to challenge voters who have defaulted on their house payments is likely to disproportionately affect African-Americans who are overwhelmingly Democratic voters," Melzer writes. "More than 60 percent of all sub-prime loans – the most likely kind of loan to go into default – were made to African-Americans in Michigan..."

Melzer points out that Republican presidential candidate John McCain's regional headquarters is in the office of the state's largest foreclosure law firm, Trott & Trott, whose founder has raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for the campaign. McCain "stands to benefit from the burgeoning number of foreclosures in the state," Melzer writes.

"At a minimum, what you are seeing is a fairly comprehensive effort by the Republican Party, a systemic broad-based effort to put up obstacles for people to vote," says Herbert. "When you are comprehensively challenging people to vote, your goals are two-fold: One is you are trying to knock people out from casting ballots; the other is to create a slowdown that will discourage others." This type of disruption would be expected in areas with high foreclosure rates, particularly the Detroit metropolitan, where one in every 176 households received foreclosure filings during the month of July, according to Melzer.

"You would think [the Macomb GOP] would think, 'This is going to look too heartless,'" says David Lagstein, head organizer for Michigan ACORN, which has registered 200,000 new voters statewide and provides foreclosure-avoidance assistance.

"The Republican-led state Senate has not moved on the anti-predatory lending bill for over a year and yet have time to prey on those who have fallen victim to foreclosure to suppress the vote," Lagstein says.

Michigan is not the only swing state at the risk of voter caging issues this election. At the urging of Project Vote and other voting rights advocates, Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner recently issued a binding directive to all county election boards, instructing them that parts of the state's challenge laws in relation to residency challenges based only on returned mail were unconstitutional. It is unclear, however, whether Brunner’s directive will prevent partisans from filing frivolous challenges anyway, which—however baseless—could have a chilling effect on voter turnout. And the Michigan Messenger reports that Franklin County, Ohio director of elections Doug Preisse and the chair of the local GOP have said they do not rule out challenging voters before the election due to foreclosure-related address issues.

In Project Vote’s statement, Teresa James says "The GOP’s plan is a cynical partisan attempt to suppress the vote of  thousands of low-income and African-American voters, a replay of the 2004 threats of mass challenges...In America you get to vote even if you’re behind on your bills. All Americans—particularly those members of the community hit hardest by the economic crisis—deserve a voice and a vote on Election Day."

Quick Links:

"Voter Caging."Project Vote.

James, Teresa. "Caging Democracy: A 50-Year History of Partisan Challenges to Minority Voters." Project Vote. September 2007.

In Other News:

'No-Match, No-Vote' Law Draws Criticism - Associated Press
TALLAHASSEE - Advocacy groups predicted Wednesday that thousands of people, mostly the poor and minorities, will be denied the right to vote through no fault of their own under a new Florida voter registration law.

Can young people actually make a difference this year? - Slate
In 2004, the "youth vote" was supposed to break all records. It did and it didn't-but either way, it didn't make a difference for John Kerry, even though he won 54 percent of voters under 29. So it is with this year's youth vote: Even if it exceeds that of four years ago-Barack Obama currently commands about 60 percent of the under-29 cohort-it will be nearly impossible to say whether it made a difference.

ACLU launches campaign to get former prisoners to register to vote – Binghamton Press & Sun-Bulletin [N.Y.]
ALBANY -- The New York Civil Liberties Union today kicked off a six-week campaign to educate county election boards and former prisoners on the voting rights of convicted felons.


Erin Ferns is a Research and Policy Analyst with Project Vote’s Strategic Writing and Research Department (SWORD).


Comments (4)

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I'm glad you guys are jumping on this, and are working on this issue. The Michigan Messenger article jumped out at me earlier, and I posted my thoughts on it a little while ago. (http://tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/2008/09/mich-gop-gearing-up-to-intimid.php)

I've worked for years on both voter challenges and foreclosures, and I wanted to point out a couple of things that you might want to follow up on. (The laws on foreclosure and possession, and on voter address issues differ from state to state.) First, there seems to be some confusion as to whether they are preparing to challenge those who have received notices that a foreclosure is in process or whether they are just challenging those where the foreclosure has happened. The difference may be important.

Second, here in AZ, even after the foreclosure (trustee's sale) happens, the (former) owner (and family) often remain in possession of the house for several weeks - or even months. It is up to the new owner to file an eviction lawsuit with the court. And, even after getting judgment, the (former) homeowner may remain in the house until the sheriff comes to serve the writ of restitution. If they are still living in the house, they can vote from that address - even if they no longer own the house.

avatar

I'm glad you guys are jumping on this, and are working on this issue. The Michigan Messenger article jumped out at me earlier, and I posted my thoughts on it a little while ago. (http://tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/2008/09/mich-gop-gearing-up-to-intimid.php)

I've worked for years on both voter challenges and foreclosures, and I wanted to point out a couple of things that you might want to follow up on. (The laws on foreclosure and possession, and on voter address issues differ from state to state.) First, there seems to be some confusion as to whether they are preparing to challenge those who have received notices that a foreclosure is in process or whether they are just challenging those where the foreclosure has happened. The difference may be important.

Second, here in AZ, even after the foreclosure (trustee's sale) happens, the (former) owner (and family) often remain in possession of the house for several weeks - or even months. It is up to the new owner to file an eviction lawsuit with the court. And, even after getting judgment, the (former) homeowner may remain in the house until the sheriff comes to serve the writ of restitution. If they are still living in the house, they can vote from that address - even if they no longer own the house.

avatar

This is outrageous. And if it happens in Michigan, it will certainly happen in other states.

We must fight back. Progressive Future has a great action page posted where you can write to Michigan's Secretary of State, Terri Lynne Land, and tell her that this kind of interference with the basic right to vote is unacceptable, and that you expect her to say so—publicly. Just click here.

avatar

This is outrageous. And if it happens in Michigan, it will certainly happen in other states.

We must fight back. Progressive Future has a great action page posted where you can write to Michigan's Secretary of State, Terri Lynne Land, and tell her that this kind of interference with the basic right to vote is unacceptable, and that you expect her to say so—publicly. Just click here.

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