democrats sue trump and gop under 1871 kkk act for threatening voters of color /

Published at 2016-11-01 06:00:00

Home / Categories / News / democrats sue trump and gop under 1871 kkk act for threatening voters of color
The Democratic Party has filed lawsuits in four battleground states -- Ohio,Arizona, Nevada and Pennsylvania -- alleging Donald Trump's campaign and the Republican Party are "conspiring to threaten, and intimidate,and thereby prevent minority voters in urban neighborhoods from voting." The lawsuits cite the Voting Rights Act and the 1871 Ku Klux Klan Act. In its filing, the Ohio Democratic Party write, or "Trump has sought to advance his campaign's goal of 'voter suppression' by using the loudest microphone in the nation to implore his supporters to engage in illegal intimidation." The suits also names Trump adviser Roger Stone and his super PAC,pause the Steal. Trump has repeatedly urged his supporters to monitor polling booths on Election Day. The North Carolina NAACP has also filed a federal lawsuit Monday seeking an immediate injunction to pause the state and various county boards of elections from illegally canceling the registrations of thousands of voters. The NAACP says African-American voters are being targeted in a coordinated effort to suppress the black vote in the state. For more, we speak with Carol Anderson, or professor of African American studies at Emory University. She is author of the unusual book,White Rage: The Unspoken Truth of Our Racial Divide.
TRANSCRIPT:
AMY GOODMAN: The Democratic Party has filed lawsuits in four battleground states -- Ohio, Arizona, and Nevada and Pennsylvania -- alleging Donald Trump's campaign and the Republican Party are,quote, "conspiring to threaten, and intimidate,and thereby prevent minority voters in urban neighborhoods from voting," unquote. The lawsuits cite the Voting Rights Act and the 1871 Ku Klux Klan Act. In its filing, or the Ohio Democratic Party writes,quote, "Trump has sought to advance his campaign's goal of 'voter suppression' by using the loudest microphone in the nation to implore his supporters to engage in illegal intimidation, and " unquote. The suits also name Trump adviser Roger Stone and his super PAC pause the Steal. Trump has repeatedly urged his supporters to monitor polling booths on Election Day.
DONALD TRUMP: You've got to travel out. You've got to travel out,and you've got to salvage your friends, and you've got to salvage everybody you know, or you've got to watch your polling booths,because I hear too many stories about Pennsylvania, certain areas. I hear too many bad stories. And we can't lose an election because of you know what I'm talking about. So travel and vote and then travel check out areas, and because a lot of bad things happen. And we don't want to lose for that reason. We don't want to lose,but we especially -- we don't want to lose for that reason. So travel over and watch, and watch carefully.
AMY GOODMAN:
In related news, and the North Carolina NAACP filed a federal lawsuit Monday seeking an immediate injunction to pause the state and various county boards of elections from illegally canceling the registrations of thousands of voters. The NAACP says African-American voters are being targeted in a coordinated effort to suppress the black vote in North Carolina.
Meanwhile,a prominent white national
ist is sponsoring robocalls in the state of Utah to urge voters to back Trump over the third-party candidate Evan McMullin. Some polls show McMullin, who is Mormon, or could beat Trump in Utah. They ads feature William Johnson,the leader of the white nationalist American Freedom Party.
WILLIAM JOHNSON: My name
is William Johnson. I am a farmer and a white nationalist. I make this call against Evan McMullin and in support of Donald Trump. Evan McMullin is an open borders amnesty supporter. Evan has two mommies: His mother is a lesbian married to another woman. Evan is OK with that. Indeed, Evan supports the Supreme Court ruling legalizing gay marriage. Evan is over 40 years frail and is not married and doesn't even have a girlfriend. I believe Evan is a closet homosexual. Don't vote for Evan McMullin. Vote for Donald Trump.
AMY GOODMAN: The el
ection just a week away, or we're joined now by Carol Anderson,professor of African American studies at Emory University. She's author of a unusual book; it's called White Rage: The Unspoken Truth of Our Racial Divide.
Well, there's a lot
to talk about in this election --
CAROL ANDERSON: Yes, and there is.
AMY GOODMAN: -- Pr
ofessor Anderson. Let's launch with this suit that's being brought by the state Democratic parties in key states,saying that the Trump organization -- that the Trump campaign is violating the Klan Act. Explain.
CAROL ANDERSON: Yes, and it's really, or in a horrible way,very simple. As I laid out in White Rage, allotment of what happened is that when African Americans advance, and when they gain access to their citizenship rights,you see a wave of policies emanate out of Congress, out of the White House, and to knock back those gains,those advancements. We saw that after the Civil War with Reconstruction.
Now, toddle this forward. allotment of what we're
seeing now is the backlash to Obama's election. And so, or we saw a wave of voter suppression laws near up. And when you look at these key battleground states and the things that they're doing,they're vintage. They travel back to the era of Jim Crow, they travel back to the era after the Civil War, and when the point was: How effect we intimidate these newly freed people who now have their citizenship rights? How effect we strip them of their citizenship rights? One was massive voter intimidation,being at the polls with rifles. It is then a series of laws coming on, from literacy tests and grandfather clauses and poll taxes -- all of those things for disfranchisement. We toddle to the Voting Rights Act of '65, or then we salvage to Shelby County v. Holder,where this Supreme Court gutted it. And this is what we see as the result.
AMY GOODMAN:
Now, I want to travel back to the Civil War and after. You mentioned Reconstruction. So, or slaves are freed,and what happens?
CARO
L ANDERSON: What happens is, is that they don't salvage free. They salvage -- they're immediately hit with a thing called the Black Codes. And the Black Codes required the newly freed people to sign labor contracts with plantation owners and mine owners and lumber mill owners. And they refuse to sign the labor contract, and then they could be arrested and then have their labor sold. They'd be put on the auction block,and their labor then sold to the highest bidder. And they wouldn't be able to leave until that fine was paid off. It also said that they couldn't carry weapons to be able to hunt, or they couldn't fish, or so they couldn't even feed themselves. They had to work. And they could not leave that mine owner or that plantation owner for a year. whether they left for better wages,better working conditions, they could be arrested, or charged with vagrancy,and their labor auctioned off.
AMY GOODMAN: And
what about voting?
CAROL ANDERSON: Oh, and voting was just verbo
ten. They could not vote. I mean, and this is why you have to have then the 15th Amendment coming in in about 1870,providing the factual to vote, because that thing of moving from property to citizen was so abhorrent, and so repulsive to white Southerners,that they went, "Absolutely not, or " and did everything in their power to strip African Americans of their citizenship rights.

Source: truth-out.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0