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Derek Cressman's User Page

Florida's Incomplete Vote Count

No matter what happens on November 5th, I can already tell you that Florida's vote count will be an inaccurate reflection of its people.

I just got off the phone with the sister of Brian Lawson, who turned 18 last February. Based on past election in Florida, Brian was skeptical that his vote would be counted, so she had to work hard to convince him that he should take the time to register himself. Finally, in early September, he did.

Then, on October 7, one day after the voter registration deadline had passed, he received a notification from his county election supervisor that his voter application was incomplete because he had failed to check the box that says:

"I affirm that I have not been adjudicated mentally incapacitated with respect to voting, or if I have, my right to vote has been restored."

Brian's discouraged, but he's not crazy. He called his local elections office, asking to correct his form, but was told it was too late for him to come in and check the box, even though the election was still weeks away.

According to Florida law, Brian would have had to complete his application by checking that box prior to the closing of the registration books on October 6 - yet the notification telling him he needed to do so wasn't postmarked until, you guessed it, October 6.

Under Florida law, the person who accepted Brian's registration form (and who failed to tell him it was incomplete) had 10 days to turn it in. Then, the state has 13 days to enter it into its system and another 5 days to process notifications of incomplete applications. That adds up to 28 days, or four weeks, which in Brian's case was how long it took before he knew there was a problem with his registration form.

In 2004, more than 14,000 registrations were rejected for being incomplete, such as missing a check box like Brian did. That's 14,000 votes not counted, making our election results an incomplete expression of the will of the people. For this and other reasons, out of 830,157 applications received between January 2006 and September 2007, 76,000 did not result in a new registration.

Some of those may have been duplicates, others erroneous applications. But in Brian's case, and thousands of others, it was simply denying a red-blooded tax-paying American the right to vote because a bureaucrat wouldn't let him check a box.

Florida :: Entry Link :: Comment
Tags: election reform, voting, florida election (all tags)

Bicycling Vet Turned Away at the Polls, His Right to Vote had Expired

Russell Baughman fought in three wars for our country. His brother, Ronald, died in one of them.

As thanks for his service, Russell was turned away from the polls when he showed up to vote on March 11.

You see, his drivers license was out of date.

Of course, to drive a car legally in his state of Indiana, one must have an up-to-date drivers license or other up to date photo ID.

But Russell doesn't need to drive a car. He rides his bike.

Click "Read More" for the rest...
General News :: Entry Link :: Read More :: 1 Comment
Tags: photo ID, voting rights (all tags)

Vermont House Approves National Popular Vote bill

The Vermont House of Representatives passed the National Popular Vote bill today by a vote of 77-35. Once ratified by enough states to form a majority in the Electoral College, this plan will ensure that the candidate for president who wins the most votes in all 50 states would be elected president.

This bill has already passed the Vermont Senate so it now goes to the Governor. Congratulations to the folks at Common Cause Vermont as well as to Rep. Chris Pearson who not only championed the bill in Vermont but is traveling to states across the country to explain the NPV agreement.

(Maybe they read my post from yesterday and got worried about how climate change would impact the skiing and maple syrup!)

Read here for updates on how this plan is moving in other states.

General News :: Entry Link :: 3 Comments
Tags: national popular vote, electoral college, presidential elections, vermont (all tags)

Does the Electoral College Deter Presidents from Addressing Global Warming?

The news on global climate change keeps getting worse, yet it has not become major topic for presidential candidates.

Climate scientist Jim Hansen (of the Goddard/NASA Institute for Space Studies) and other climatoligists are telling the world that we have already exceeded the levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere that could be considered safe:

If humanity wishes to preserve a planet similar to that on which civilization developed and to which life on Earth is adapted, paleoclimate evidence and ongoing climate change suggest that CO2 will need to be reduced from its current 385 ppm to at most 350 ppm.
The scientists say that we need to take very serious measures very soon:
Present policies, with continued construction of coal-fired power plants without CO2 capture, suggest that decision-makers do not appreciate the gravity of the situation. We must begin to move now toward the era beyond fossil fuels. Continued growth of greenhouse gas emissions, for just another decade, practically eliminates the possibility of near-term return of atmospheric composition beneath the tipping level for catastrophic effects.
While Hilary Clinton, Barack Obama, and John McCain all talk about the need to do something to reduce emissions, none of the proposals they support (such as reducing emissions by 85% by 2050) come close to what Jim Hansen and other scientists are now telling us will be necessary. Even Al Gore didn't spend much time talking about global warming when he was running for president.

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General News :: Entry Link :: Read More :: 1 Comment
Tags: electoral college, national popular vote, global warming, climate change (all tags)

Senator Ensign -- Show Us the Money!

I was in Reno, Nevada yesterday with former Nevada Common Cause Board Chair Jim Hulse and a group of activists who were calling on Senator Jim Ensign to explain his obstruction of a bill to require U.S. Senators to tell us who they are taking money from -- now.

Watch a video of our event:

Currently, Senators file campaign finance disclosure reports on paper.  The paper reports are scanned into a computer, printed out, and then retyped to be placed on the Federal Election Commission website.  This process takes about four months and costs about $250,000 in taxpayer dollars.

Click "Read More" for the rest...
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Tags: electronic disclosure, money in politics, government accountability, Senate, Ensign, sunshine, campaign finance reform (all tags)

Ameriquest Shows How Big Money in Politics Hurts Real People-- By Kicking Them Out of Their House

When I head home for the holidays, my relatives sometimes have a hard time grasping what I do as a "reformer" and how that impacts their daily lives.  This year, I'll point them to a recent story in the Seattle Times that describes how 96-year old Francis Taylor is about to lose her home of more than 40 years when banks foreclose on loans she took out from the now defunct lender Ameriquest.


After inventing the "sub-prime" mortgage industry, the collapse of which now threatens to throw the country into a recession, Ameriquest has gone into bankruptcy and sold its remnents to Citifinancial.  The company settled a lawsuit with 49 states recently for $325 million out of claims of predatory lending.  They also recently paid a fine for violating the do not call list.  I guess greed knows no bounds, certainly not privacy in your own home (that they plan to take away from you.)


The sad thing is, things didn't have to work out this way.  Years ago, consumer advocates saw the crisis coming and urged state governments to put stricter regulations in place.  Today's Sacramento Bee reminds us how the California legislature failed to enact reforms back in 2001. Ameriquest and others said this would make it harder for first time homeowners to buy their first abode, but it turns out that almost all of Ameriquest's loans went to existing homeowners -- many of whom the company probably knew could not make the payments and would end up losing their houses.

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General News :: Entry Link :: Read More :: Comment
Tags: Ameriquest, subprime mortgage, lobbying, campaign contrbutions, money in politics (all tags)

California Common Cause Launches Redistricting Initiative to Put Voters First

Common Cause's Kathay Feng
Announces the Voters FIRST Redistricting
Reform Ballot Initiative

California Common Cause has worked for years to change the process by which politicians currently draw their own political districts -- a process that in effect allows politicians to choose their voters before voters can choose among politicians.

These efforts took a big step forward today with the official launch of the Voters FIRST initiative.  This ballot question, filed by Common Cause, AARP, and the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, will appear on the November 2008 ballot if enough Californians sign petitions to support it by next April.
Read the full text of the initiative here.

Today, the campaign received a big boost in receiving endorsements from the California League of Women Voters and Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.

Click "Read More" for the rest...
California :: Entry Link :: Read More :: 4 Comments
Tags: redistricting, gerrymandering, Voters FIRST, California, in the states, election reform (all tags)


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