In what is becoming a mockery
of democracy as I see it within the democratic party, the issues
of voter suppression and disenfranchisement are being diluted
by the usual political rhetoric. What is very clear is that
unequivocally, the citizens of both Florida
and Michigan went to the polls for their primaries with the intent of
their votes being counted in the democratic primary and obviously
that is proving not the case because of DNC punishment. Voter
disenfranchisement has always and will forever translate into
voter disgust and mistrust particularly, among African Americans
and people of color. We have seen in the most recent of times,
election after election manipulated beyond belief. The question
that still stands regarding the Democratic Party and the seating
of such delegates without a doubt will determine the outcome
of this year’s election and the will of the people or lack
thereof.
Joining the
ranks of a host of others in a letter dated February 8th NAACP
National Board
Chair, Julian Bond rightfully called the democratic party to
the carpet on such issues regarding the aforementioned states.
Himself a veteran, and victim of such blatant oppression, knows
what it feels like not to have the will of the people counted,
as a result of such disenfranchisement. In his letter co-written
by others in the civil rights community he asserted, "Refusing
to seat the states' delegations could remind voters of the
sordid history of racially discriminatory primaries." The
moral and politically right thing for the convention's credentials
and rules committee to do, would be to rule on the side with
the citizens of both states and allow their votes to be counted.
I would implore the Chairman Howard Dean and party officials
to find some resolution to the issue prior to the opening of
the convention. With an abundance of prudence, a think that
it would be a mistake and wrong for the party not to do otherwise.
Gone are the days of poll
taxes, ridiculous questions, literacy tests and outright intimidation.
Pray tell, what message will the democratic party send to voters
who are already apprehensive about the voting process? The
issue is not about any particular democratic candidate; it
is about principle. What a terrible feeling to go to the voting
polls, stand in long lines on cold mornings, or late nights
rhetorically wondering, “Will my vote, be Counted?”
Immediately, reminiscence
about the Democratic National Convention of 1964 comes to mind
in this 2008 election season. Fannie Lou Hamer, from the deep
south testified before America and the
DNC Credentials Committee after they had refused to seat her
and the delegates of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party.
She told the committee how African-Americans in many states
across the country were prevented from voting and thereby disenfranchised.
She declared that “she didn’t come that far, for no two
votes,” and that she was “sick and tired, of being sick and
tired.”
BC Guest Commentator, The Reverend D. D. Prather, is a noted Civil/Social
Justice Activist, and a native of Atlanta, GA . Click
here to contact the Reverend Prather.