Monday, May 21, 2007

"Voting Rights" group goes bye-bye

Slate reports that the American Center for Voting Rights has silently closed up shop.

With no notice and little comment, ACVR—the only prominent nongovernmental organization claiming that voter fraud is a major problem, a problem warranting strict rules such as voter-ID laws—simply stopped appearing at government panels and conferences. Its Web domain name has suddenly expired, its reports are all gone (except where they have been preserved by its opponents), and its general counsel, Mark "Thor" Hearne, has cleansed his résumé of affiliation with the group. Hearne won't speak to the press about ACVR's demise. No other group has taken up the "voter fraud" mantra....

Consisting of little more than a post-office box and some staffers who wrote reports and gave helpful quotes about the pervasive problems of voter fraud to the press, the group identified Democratic cities as hot spots for voter fraud, then pushed the line that "election integrity" required making it harder for people to vote. The group issued reports (PDF) on areas in the country of special concern, areas that coincidentally tended to be presidential battleground states...

4 comments:

Gonzo said...

Kinda weird.

I can understand how a group may break up over time and it's members move on but why would the guy cleanse his resume of his affiliation?

Must be Karl Rove told them to shut down ;-D

SeattleSusieQ said...

Gonz, it doesn't bother you - the muckraking, the lies, the innuendo - that this Republican entity tried to disenfranchise voters? I'm against that no matter who does it.

Instead, it's just a joke to you.

Gonzo said...

It's not a joke to me, it's just not to be taken too seriously.

Gonzo said...

To elaborate, part of their plank I agree with. We've discussed this before but I reiterate my belief that a modicum of positive ID for voters is required.

In general we could do much, much better in the whole area of voting.