Why is George Bush President?
by Allan J. Lichtman
George W. Bush is president today because the votes counted in Florida's
presidential election did not match the ballots cast by the state's voters.
But the outcome in Florida--which determined the presidency--was not
decided by hanging chads, recounts, or intervention by the Supreme Court.
Al Gore lost Florida's presidential vote because electoral officials tossed
into the trashcan as invalid more than one out of every ten ballots cast by
African-Americans throughout the state. In some counties, nearly 25 percent
of ballots cast by blacks were set aside as invalid. In contrast, officials
rejected only about one out of every fifty ballots cast by whites
statewide.
This vast racial disparity in ballot rejection rates defeated Al Gore. If
black ballots had been rejected at the same minimal rate as white ballots,
more than 50,000 additional black votes would have been counted in
Florida's presidential election. Given that more than 90 percent of blacks
favored Gore over Bush, Gore would have won Florida by at least 40,000
votes, prevailed in the Electoral College, and become President of the
United States on January 20, 2001.
These were the results of a statistical study that I was commissioned to
conduct for the United States Commission on Civil Rights and a subsequent
analysis published in the Journal of Legal Studies (January 2003).
Independent studies by Professors Phil Klinkner of Hamilton College and
Anthony Salvanto of the University of California, Irvine have confirmed the
finding of major racial disparities in ballot rejection rates as have
studies by the New York Times and Washington Post.
My studies pointed no fingers of blame at any official involved in
Florida's 2000 presidential election. But the studies did call for a
thorough investigation by federal authorities to find out why ballots cast
by blacks were disqualified at such a higher rate than ballots cast by
whites.
Two members of the Civil Rights Commission who filed a dissenting report
did not substantively dispute the finding of wide racial disparities in
ballot rejection rates in Florida. But they denied the need for
investigation, placing blame squarely on black voters, who allegedly lacked
the education and literacy to fill out their ballots properly.
Analysis showed, however, that blacks were much more likely to have their
ballots set aside than whites even after controlling for ballot design,
voting technology, education, income, poverty, literacy, and first-time
voting--a finding that independent analysis likewise confirmed. According
to a New York Times study, "even after these factors [education, income,
ballot design] and others were accounted for the study showed a
significantly higher rate of rejected ballots in precincts with a large
proportion of black voters."
The Right has desperately sought to suppress the truth about Florida's
presidential elections both to silence any questions about the legitimacy
of Bush's victory and to validate their assumption that race no longer
matters in America today. Racial problems, they would have us believe, were
solved long ago in the era of the civil rights movement. Never mind the
wealth of studies documenting racial disparities not only in voting rights
but in matters of everyday life including police stops, mortgage lending,
heath care, hiring and promotion.
Imagine, however, if Democrats had controlled the government of Florida in
2000 and Al Gore had won the state and the presidency because more than one
out of ten white voters had their ballots disqualified, compared to only
one out of fifty black voters. This would have been the crime of the
millennium for ideologues of the Right demanding investigation by every
federal official that could be summoned to the state.
But slumbering liberals are no less to blame than militant conservatives
for the lack of national attention to an extraordinary injustice to
minorities that determined the outcome of a presidential election. Why no
mobilization of protest from the NAACP? The Urban League? The ACLU? The
Democratic Party?
Absent public outrage, the United States Department of Justice has never
conducted the necessary investigation of Florida's presidential election to
discover the reasons behind racial disparities in ballot rejection rates.
So we must wish away what really happened in Florida and never find out why
African-Americans disproportionately lost their right to vote or how to
make sure this doesn't happen again anywhere in America. Unfortunately,
despite passage of a federal election reform bill, another Florida remains
a tragic risk for 2004.
--Allan J. Lichtman, Professor of History at American University in
Washington DC conducted the study of ballot rejection rates in Florida for
the United States Commission on Civil Rights.
|