
image courtesy stealbackyourvote.org stealbackyourvote.org
- FBI offers $50,000 reward in connection with Vail arson case
- Vilar found guilty, what now for Beaver Creek performing arts center?
- Single-engine plane bound for Aspen crashes in Holy Cross Wilderness near Vail
- Garfield County commish race a study in conflicting interests on the Western Slope
- Anatomy of a meltdown: how Bob Schaffer lost Colorado's U.S. Senate race to Mark Udall
- Can skiing, hiking, hunting and fishing coexist with Colorado's booming energy industry?
- Eagle County officials working overtime to avoid election scandal
- Polis congressional opponent Starin questions global warming
- McInnis predicts he could have taken out Udall, blames far right wing of state GOP
- Wall Street woes undermine GOP's 'drill, baby, drill' campaign push
- All Real News Articles
August 27, 2008 — Robert Kennedy Jr. had a pretty good excuse for skipping his scheduled appearance with investigative journalist Greg Palast to promote their latest project, “Steal Back Your Vote” — a report on voting irregularities and fraud in the 2008 election.
Palast, speaking at the Progressive Democrats of America gathering at a downtown Denver church during the DNC Tuesday, excused Kennedy’s absence to be with his uncle, Monday’s inspirational surprise speaker Sen. Ted Kennedy, and introduced a surprise replacement of his own, Amy Goodman of Democracy Now.
Progressive investigative journalist Goodman asked a delegate to hold up a goody bag with sponsor logo from AT&T on one side and decried the influence of big corporate money on the modern American political process.
She talked about trying to get into a delegate gathering at Mile High Stadium Monday and being denied access by towering security guards. Goodman said delegates at a corporate party are in training for just how skewed by campaign contributions politics in America have become, and added that there can be no good reasons to keep the press out, only bad ones.
“When you’ve got money saturating politics, and even if you care deeply about the public good, you’ve got to see where the money is and that’s what this is about every four years,” Goodman said. “It’s about teaching (budding politicians) big-money politics.”
Goodman said AT&T’s sponsorship of the DNC is the Democrats’ reward for refusing to block a bill several weeks ago giving telecom companies retroactive immunity for facilitating domestic spying by the feds. She also urged support of independent media during both parties’ political conventions in order to limit and expose excesses by police against protesters in Denver and Minnesota.
Palast took back the microphone to talk up his project with Kennedy, which will be the subject of a feature in a major national magazine next month and which also will be released as a 24-page comic-book-style PDF illustrated by three top political cartoonists. The report will be available on the Web site www.stealbackyourvote.org.
Palast said former Colorado Secretary of State Donetta Davidson has made the state the epicenter of the rampant practice of purging voter registration lists for alleged irregularities — a tactic now even more en vogue in the wake of new legislation backed by the Bush administration.
“Now under the Help America Vote Act the entire nation is Floridated, but the champ, [former Florida Secretary of State] Katherine Harris, ain’t got nothing on Colorado,” Palast said. “We’re sitting at purge ground zero. The reason that there’s a convention here is this is a swing state where Democrats are piling in, tens of thousands of new voters in Colorado at the top of the bucket, but at the bottom of the bucket the spread sheets are going (poof).
“What’s happening? Donetta Davidson, who had been secretary of state in the state of Colorado, removed 19.4 percent — one out of five voters in the state of Colorado, she removed their names. And what happens to Davidson as a result of this? The answer is George Bush made her head of the brand new Election Assistance Commission, where she can train all 50 secretaries of state in her purging ways. In fact, President Bush, instead of calling her chairwoman of the EAC, was going to call her the Purging General.”
3 Comments on "Palast: One out of five Colorado voters purged from voter registration"
wes — October 7, 2008
And what the he11 are you people in Colorado doing about this?
Aren't you outraged?
Dave — October 9, 2008
Firstly, why didn't the article include ways to check and verify that a person was not purged so as many people as possible can avoid being refused their right to vote? Secondly, if any of these purges have occurred within 90 days of the election date, why isn't the State Attorney General or the State Supreme Court not acting unilaterally (without a suit or comlaint being filed) to stop and force reinstatement (unpurge, depurge, expurge???) of the purged voters? Regardless of political affiliation (I'm unaffiliated), this is unconstitutional and another attempt to expand our Oligarchy (definately not a democracy) into semi-dictatorship!
Christen-Mitchell — October 29, 2008
Funny, we've processed over 4,000 early voters at CU Boulder campus with not a single complaint of a purge,
















