Bob Fitrakis: 'Blackwell, black votes and God's will in the Buckeye State'
Bob Fitrakis, The Columbus Free Press
The eyes of the nation are once again focused on Ohio thanks in part to
Robert F. Kennedy's epic essay in the June 15 Rolling Stone, entitled "Was
the 2004 Election Stolen?" Kenneth F. Bunting, the Associate Publisher of
the Seattle Post-Intellligencer, wrote that the article essentially is
"singling out Ohio Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell for much of the
blame, . . ." Blackwell, never one to be an easy target, recently fingered
William Anthony, the Franklin County Democratic Party Chair and Chair of the
county's board of elections, as the real culprit. Blackwell told a group of
black ministers in Cleveland that the long waits to vote on November 2, 2004
in Columbus were due to the black Democrat, Anthony.
The target: Black votes
The tactic is understandable since most mainstream corporate newspapers,
like the Dayton Daily News, have been pointing out that the election hinges
on black crossover votes. As the Dayton paper put it on May 9, a week after
Blackwell's victory over Attorney General James Petro in the Republican
primary for governor, some political analysts "believe that large numbers of
black Democrats may defect to vote for Republican J. Kenneth Blackwell in
November."
Listening to Blackwell's plans for Ohio's Appalachian region, one can see
why he needs the black Democratic crossover vote. Blackwell, preaching
traditional social Darwinism, wants the region's nearly 1.5 million
residents with an average income of $20,516 to "climb the economic ladder"
and his original plan to bring prosperity was to cut much of the safety net
in southeast Ohio by limiting state spending.
But Blackwell's secret weapon here is his embracing of white evangelical
Christian rhetoric and his connections with a grassroots network of a
thousand or more "patriot pastors." He's fond of quoting the Bible in his
speeches, but he also knows how to praise the Lord and round up
contributions and endorsements from would-be presidential candidates.
Ohio at ground zero again
The Boston Globe and other newspapers pointed out that the 2006
gubernatorial battle in the Buckeye State may determine the presidency in
2008. No Republican candidate has ever won the presidency without winning
Ohio and the winner in Ohio, Democrat or Republican, has prevailed in 15 out
of the last 17 presidential elections. As a result, national presidential
contenders have flooded the state to campaign for Democratic gubernatorial
candidate, Rep. Ted Strickland or for Blackwell. Sen. John Kerry came
recently as well as his former running mate, former Sen. John Edwards.
Retired General Wesley Clark, Sen. Joseph Biden, and Iowa Governor Tom
Vilsack have visited. On the Republican side, Senators John McCain and Bill
Frist took trips here and so did Governor Milt Romney of Massachusetts and
former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani.
Despite initial problems with the black elected officials in the major
cities, a month after the primary Strickland was able to finally win
endorsements from Clevleand Congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs Jones and Mayors
Michael Coleman of Columbus, Frank Jackson of Cleveland and Rhine McLin of
Dayton. Blackwell's strategy for the black community is two-fold. On the one
hand, appeal directly to the black ministers on conservative social issues
like gay marriage and on the other, suppress the heavily Democratic urban
vote in Ohio's largest cities. Suppressing registration
Aided by the Republican-dominated Statehouse, Blackwell is now working with
laws that greatly restrict voter registration drives and require photo ID at
the polls. A recent ruling by Blackwell, in his capacity as Secretary of
State, requires any individual who registers someone to vote to personally
submit the person's registration card at Blackwell's office in the capital
city of Columbus. Raj Nayak, a lawyer for the Brennan Center for Justice,
came to Columbus to denounce Blackwell's rules for "obstructing voter
registration efforts." Peg Rosenfeld of the League of Women Voters lamented
that while the law passed by the Republican-dominated legislature is
restrictive, Blackwell's rules "are more restrictive than the bill."
Common Cause President Samuel Gresham weighed in as well, telling the
Columbus Dispatch that the ruling "raises questions about the intent of the
Secretary of State." Shocking to most people was the fact that Blackwell
implemented the rules prior to holding a public hearing or obtaining
approval from the bipartisan Joint Committee on Agency Rule Review.
But that's Blackwell, just being Blackwell, using the law to its full
advantage for partisan political purposes.
Strickland immediately called for Blackwell to give up oversight over the
2006 election. Strickland's running mate, Lee Fisher, stated, "His decision
this week to suppress Ohio votes for personal gain is where he draws the
line." Too bad they didn't draw this line during 2004.
Dubious plans, suspicious past
Blackwell, no fan of secular institutes of higher education, vows to bring
the voucher plan to colleges and universities. According to the Dayton Daily
News, "Blackwell says he wants state funding to follow students, rather than
institutions." Blackwell also told the Canton Repository that he seeks to
privatize services at colleges and universities and that state college
trustees should be able to ignore Ohio's prevailing wage law in construction
projects. Blackwell also wants to lease the Ohio turnpike to private
operators.
Blackwell is that rare public official who managed to become a
multimillionaire while working as the state's Treasury Secretary by
parlaying a $500,000 investment with three other investors into a $190
million sale of radio stations within six years. Some have questioned
whether or not his decisions as Treasury Secretary influenced the millions
of dollars in loans he received from friendly banks including those owned by
billionaire Carl Lindner of Cincinnati. The Lindner family is Blackwell's
major donor in the last campaign reporting, giving him $90,000.
Blackwell's cozy relations with Lindner and the Bush family, with direct
ties to neocon think tanks that support regime change in countries opposing
U.S. foreign policy, has not emerged as a major issue in the election.
Rather than portraying himself as a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Bush
Family, Inc. and their allies, he recently described himself as "unbought
and unbossed."
King had a dream - Blackwell is a nightmare
Blackwell's fond of using civil rights phrases and comparing himself to
Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr. and, ironically, Robert Kennedy.
Recently, Blackwell spoke at the Omega Baptist Church in Dayton and,
according to the Dayton Daily News, found a receptive audience among the
mostly black congregation. About half of them gave him a standing ovation.
Blackwell told the assembled audience: "I don't wear my religion on my
sleeve - it is my armor."
The Dems quickly countered by holding a press conference at the Martin
Luther King, Jr. Performing and Cultural Arts Complex in Columbus to attack
Blackwell and praise Strickland. State Rep. Joyce Beatty, leader of the Ohio
House Democratic Caucus, reminded reporters of the massive
disenfranchisement of black voters in the 2004 presidential election, a fact
reiterated and documented in detail in Rolling Stone's Kennedy article.
The National Hip-Hop Convention then attacked Blackwell for adopting rules
"reminiscent of the Jim Crow-era."
Still, Blackwell works the religious circuit, secretly meeting with a dozen
or so ministers at Wilberforce University on May 31, including the
influential Rev. Keith Troy of Columbus and Pastor Aaron Wheeler, Chair of
the Ohio Civil Rights Commission.
Desperate Republicans
But leave it to British journalists to put Ohio in perspective. London's
Guardian newspaper noted in their Sunday May 14 edition that "Desperate
Republicans Chase the Black Vote," pointing out that as Bush's poll numbers
and support collapse to near record lows, the White House and top Republican
officials have launched a blitz to persuade black people that their future
will be better served by shedding decades of loyalty to the Democratic Party
and voting Republican instead. The Republican national strategy will be
tested in the United States' premier bell weather state - Ohio. One great
fear, according to the Guardian, is that Hurricane Katrina will re-emerge as
a campaign issue.
The Republicans are pushing black Republicans in other key states as well.
Maryland's Michael Steele is seeking to become a U.S. Senator and former
Pittsburgh Steeler star Lynn Swann is vying for governor of Pennsylvania.
Apparently it was God's will that Blackwell take $10,000 from a Diebold
lobbyist
The Chicago Tribune has dubbed Blackwell the "anti-Obama" and far right
political strategist like Paul Weyrich has dubbed Blackwell "someone who is
God-centered and who prays to do God's will rather than his own." The
right-wing journal Human Events compares Blackwell to Ronald Reagan and see
his election in Ohio as a "sea change." Blackwell told Human Events that,
"The churches put that issue over [anti-gay marriage amendment], and in the
process, put the president over the top and doubled the share of black
votes."
As Secretary of State, Blackwell encouraged the controversial voting machine
company Diebold to enter the Ohio market. Also, he disclosed just before the
primary that he "accidentally owned Diebold stock" while personally
negotiating a no-bid contract for the company to bring private proprietary
electronic voting machines into 47 of Ohio's 88 counties. Diebold lobbyist
Mitch Given recently donated $10,000, the maximum allowed under Ohio law to
Blackwell. Blackwell's version of the Lord surely works mysterious ways.
Bob Fitrakis, Free Press Editor, submitted 11,000 signatures on May 1 to run
as an independent Green-endorsed candidate for Ohio governor. His signatures
have just now been certified by Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell's
office.
(c) 2006 The Columbus Free Press
Source: The Columbus Free Press
http://www.freepress.org/columns/display/3/2006/1395
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"A little patience and we shall see the reign of witches pass over, their
spells dissolve, and the people recovering their true sight, restore their
government to its true principles. It is true that in the meantime we are
suffering deeply in spirit,
and incurring the horrors of a war and long oppressions of enormous public
debt. But if the game runs sometimes against us at home we must have
patience till luck turns, and then we shall have an opportunity of winning
back the principles we have lost, for this is a game where principles are at
stake."
-Thomas Jefferson