Our View
Goodman: Who decides which Americans get to vote?
The 2008 presidential election may see the highest participation in U.S. history. Voter-registration organizations and local election boards have been overwhelmed by enthusiastic people eager to vote. But not everyone is happy about this blossoming of democracy.
ACORN, the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, has become a lightning rod for the right wing. ACORN's Web site notes that “the electorate does not reflect the citizenry of the United States of America. It skews whiter, older, more educated and more affluent than the citizenry as a whole.” Bertha Lewis, ACORN's lead organizer, told me: “We organize low- and moderate-income people, usually folks who are minorities - African-Americans, Latinos, Asians and working-class white people. And most of these folks have always been disenfranchised out of the electoral process. ... We've registered 1.3 million new voters across the country over an 18-month period of time. We had over 13,000 hard-working voter-registration workers. And we may have had a few bad apples, but I don't know any organization that didn't.”
Barack Obama himself was questioned about ACORN's problematic registrations. He said: “Having run a voter-registration drive, I know how problems arise. This is typically a situation where ACORN probably paid people to get registrations, and these folks, not wanting to actually register people, because that's actually hard work, just went into a phone book or made up names and submitted false registrations to get paid. So there's been fraud perpetrated on probably ACORN, if they paid these individuals and they actually didn't do registrations. But this isn't a situation where there's actually people who are going to try to vote, because these are phony names.”
Where to next?
- Goodman: Who decides which Americans get to vote?
- Artist's View: Plan
- Molloy: Nation's fate is in my hands
- Estabrook: Satire news all in good fun?
- More than 50 percent plus one needed
- Boyer: Send us those election letters
- Reagan: If Reagan era is dead, who killed it?
- Bobo: Boards key in finding supers
- Our View: Paterson needs to be open on O'Byrne tax investigation
- Two Cents
- Officials say cheese factory is coming
- Auburn chooses Hatch Acres to work on State Dam improvements
- Cheese factory reps say they are committed to Aurelius site
- NEW FEATURE: Election page brings stories, debates, discussion together
- NY governor orders background checks of his staff
- Fireworks co. blows up over NY parade dropping 'Christmas' from name
- Auburn may have to pay to avoid litigation
- Higher costs will affect Union Springs Stone Schoolhouse renovations



