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Chicago Voting Equipment Decisions

With Help America Vote Act deadlines approaching Chicago is about to make a decision on voting machines. This is a serious issue and I have to say very few of the decisions I’ve seen made to date have to do with accuracy and design checks to ensure fraud can be detected.

Earnest of Deadly Earnest hits the right notes and fills us in on what seems to be the primary choices and the advantages and disadvantages of the systems as well as develops a useful criteria for evaluating which should be chosen.

Then he links to a study by David Kimball, a Professor at UM-Saint Louis-and a friend of mine. The work David has done on the issue is first rate and I’ll invite him to make any comments if he wishes.

The assumption by many is that a Democratic city is likely to want to have the most reliable system possible. But that is a horrible assumption. The Machine, that what is left of it, wants to undercount poor votes–which are black and Latino usually. Encouraging and counting more votes is a bad thing to those in power generally and so public pressure for a reliable system is vital.

Don’t believe me–do you think that Daley and his people aren’t thinking about a challenge from Jackson right now and how voting machines and turnout might affect such an election? I’m not a fan of Jackson myself, but that’s not the point. Election integrity is the point and a bad system will not

The Machine can work with a Republican Governor or President, but it doesn’t want contested city and local elections.

Any reporters who want to talk to David, I’m happy to put you in contact with him. For the activists–send this out on the DFA and Obama listservs and anyothers.

Back To Normal Tomorrow

I have a radio appearance at 7 PM CST tonight and I’m refreshing my tank on what I need to know.

For those interested in school reforms discusssions, I’ll be on KDHX’s Collateral Damage on 88.1 in the Saint Louis area or at kdhx.org. The other guest is Peter Downs who is a critic of the current Board Majority in Saint Louis and newly announced candidate to for an open slot.

With that, I’ll have a whole bunch of things off of my plate and ready to resume regular blogging.

DNC Leadership Update

Pete Giangreco left a comment the other day about Donnie Fowler:

Take a close look at my friend Donnie Fowler for DNC chair.

Here’s a guy is been on both ends. He was grassroots before grassroots was cool — worked in 14 states including state director for Kerry in Michigan. He’s also done the national piece as Natl Field Director for Gore. 3 years in Silicon Valley, gets new politics, but also understands that we can’t write off the rural Midwest, the West and places like his homestate of South Carolina.

Last week he unveiled his new podcasting plans — sending recorded messages for people to download onto their Ipods.

He gets it.

Donnie’s site is here

Donnie has had some rough treatment by some of the blogs, but he’d be a good choice as well. I think he understand the grassroots, perhaps in a way that some blog focused folks don’t. I’d put him in the category of three people running that provide me with some hope for reshaping the party in terms of structure and efforts. He needs to work a bit on the the interactive nature of online activism, but he’s trying to be chair, not chief technician.

All that said, Fowler and Simon Rosenberg are left in the shadow of Howard Dean who is racking up a lot of early endorsements. Today Dean racked up the endorsements of Party Chairs or Vice Chairs in six different states.

As such a hugely high profile race, competent guys like Rosenberg and Fowler are finding it hard to get oxygen, but both would probably do a good job.

UPDATE: Fixed title typo.

Drinking Liberally

ith a bitter chill in the air,
What way to better warm spirits
Than good friends, good beer,
And a little Progressive banter?

Drinking Liberally Chicago
Promoting democracy one pint at a time

Each and Every Wednesday Night @ 8:30 pm
The Red Lion, 2446 N Lincoln, 2nd Floor
Just around the corner from the Fullerton L Stop

Come join fellow progressives and find out what
Newsweek, the New York Daily News, and the Atrios blog
Have all been talking about!

All you need to do is show up and drink

www.drinkingliberally.org

Co-Hosted by The Chicago Chapter of 2020 Democrats

People’s Inaugural Info

ople’s Inaugural Info:

If you didn’t get tickets to the Bush inaugural ’cause:
a) you’re not a billionaire who has exported thousands of jobs
overseas;
b) you’ve struggled to pay your bills, find a job, buy your
medicine, orput your kids through school;
c) don’t have a fortune invested on Wall Street or within the
confines of the Great Wall in China; or
d) you just can’t stand the thought of Bush &?his puppeteers having
4 more years to move America back to the 19th century &?create havoc
around the world; AND
e) you’re in the Chicago area ?. . .

Then this event is for you. ?Join Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky for
the People’s Inaugural &?take the oath to move America forward at
the same time George W. Bush is taking his oath.

The People’s Inaugural
Thursday, January 20th, 2005
12:00 Noon to 1:00 pm
The Allegro Hotel
171 W. Randolph, Chicago

This Thursday, President Bush is going to be sworn in to his second
term. (I know, I know, think “Nixon”) We have an opportunity to
express our displeasure with this event. While the President is
kicking off his second term with a $40 million dollar bacchanalian
display of cooperate greed and power, we will be holding our own
People’s Inaugural. As the President is sworn in with the oath of
office, we too, will take an oath, to take America forward.

We swear to defend Social Security, we swear to fight for fully
funded public schools, and we swear to continue to voice our strong
the opposition to this administration’s misguided policies. We will
fight to take America forward, despite the administration’s best
efforts.

Please join us, this Thursday, for the People’s Inaugural.

Jan Schakowsky

(please RSVP by e-mail if you can attend, alex@janschakowsky.org)

Haven’t Talked About the DNC Chair

I don’t have a favorite yet, though I am going to Howard Dean’s event tomorrow night here in St. Louis. I lean toward Rosenberg or Dean. I’m strongly against Roemer who would be a disaster all around. Not even because his positions are more conservative, but because he seems to have little idea of how to run a modern campaign. The committees as strong as they could be with Schumer at DSCC, Emanual at DCCC and Richardson at DGA. Roemer does not have the vision for the party and buidling it up from the grassroots. He’ll keep the party focused on consultants and not people.

As much as people like to point to Karl Rove as the great architect of Bush’s victories, one has to remember the reelection is due to grassroots operations that weren’t controlled by the campaign. That’s an important lesson.

Stevenson High Students Involvement in the Mississippi Burning Case

Barry Bradford, a teacher at Stevenson High in Lincolnshire, had three students working to publicize the case of three murdered civil rights workers during the Freedom Summer in 1964.

With the arrest of Edgar Ray Killen for the murders, they are receiving some well earned attention.

Barry thanks the readers who contacted their Representatives. I think we should thank Barry and the three students, Sarah Siegel, Allison Nichols and Brittany Saltiel For more information go here.

From Barry:

On December 15, you were kind enough to post a request from my students,
asking your readers to write their Congressman to request a reopening of
the “Mississippi Burning” Murder Case. ?On behalf of Brittany, Sarah, and
Allison, I’d like to thank all of the ArchPundit readers who helped make a
difference!

Here is an article from the Belleville News-Democrat:

Posted on Fri, Jan. 07, 2005

Student documentarians gratified by arrest in civil rights killings
NICOLE ZIEGLER DIZON
Associated Press

CHICAGO – Hundreds of miles from a Mississippi courtroom where a suspect
pleaded innocent Friday to the 40-year-old slayings of three civil rights
workers, three suburban Chicago high school students were getting
accolades for their role in publicizing the case.

Stevenson High School students Sarah Siegel, Allison Nichols and Brittany
Saltiel spent more than a year working on a 2004 documentary about the
killings. Their project included a rare phone interview with the man
arrested Thursday, reputed Ku Klux Klan member Edgar Ray Killen, and
helped generate a congressional resolution last June asking federal
prosecutors to reopen the case.

“I was really happy for all the families who I knew had been waiting for
this for 40 years,” 17-year-old Siegel said Friday of Killen’s arrest. “It
was also a little saddening to know that it took 40 years for justice to
start working.”

The girls and their teacher, Barry Bradford, are humble about their part
in renewing interest in the case, which was the subject of the 1988 movie
“Mississippi Burning.”

But congressmen including Rep. John Lewis, a Georgia Democrat and civil
rights activist who knew the slain workers, credit the students for
working to keep the case in the spotlight and unearthing new details.

“I was very inspired and very moved by the work that these three students
brought before us,” Lewis said Friday. “I think they were crucial in
bringing us to this point.”

The girls’ odyssey began in the summer of 2003, when they met with
Bradford to discuss possible projects for the annual National History Day
competition. They stopped him after his first idea: telling the story of
21-year-old James Chaney, 20-year-old Andrew Goodman and 24-year-old
Michael Schwerner.

The three young men were participating in Freedom Summer 1964, an effort
to register blacks in the South to vote and start educational programs,
when they were beaten and shot to death, allegedly by Klansmen. Their
ages, not much older than the girls, struck a chord.

“We just thought something about those three men and their dedication to
the movement really stood out,” 16-year-old Saltiel said.

Although 19 men were eventually charged with federal civil rights
violations in the case, Killen’s arrest marks the first time Mississippi
has sought murder charges.

The Lincolnshire students pored over thousands of pages of court
transcripts and interviewed former prosecutors and investigators,
witnesses, family members of the victims and government officials for
their 10-minute documentary. They also sought out Killen, now 79, for a
phone interview.

Bradford decided to conduct the interview after a Justice Department
official expressed concern about the girls having to testify in the future
in case Killen said something incriminating.

Killen didn’t implicate himself in the killings, Bradford said, but he did
say the reason civil rights workers were so hated at the time was because
people thought they were recruiting blacks to be communists.

Soon after that interview, Bradford said his and the girls’ names were
posted on a white supremacist Web site that accused them of trying to skew
the truth.

“I think it was truly a little startling to them to realize that there are
still remnants of that archaic mind-set,” Bradford said.

The students say the most rewarding part of their project was meeting with
family members of the slain men, including Goodman’s mother and Chaney’s
brother, who called them “superhero girls.”