COUP WATCH: SNCC Demands Federal Voting Rights Investigation

by Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SN Tuesday, Dec. 05, 2000 at 1:44 PM

Dozens of civil rights activists who worked in the South in the 1960s for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee today called for an official investigation into evidence that thousands of blacks were denied the right to vote in the 2000 presidential election.

COUP WATCH: SNCC Demands Federal Voting Rights Investigation COUP WATCH: SNCC Demands Federal Voting Rights Investigation

Mon Dec 04 07:45:22 2000

Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)

For Immediate Release

December 3, 2000

Contact: Mendy Samstein, 607-263-2476 or msamstein@aol.com

FORMER CIVIL RIGHTS WORKERS DEMAND FEDERAL VOTING RIGHTS INVESTIGATION

Dozens of civil rights activists who worked in the South in the 1960s for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee today called for an official investigation into evidence that thousands of blacks were denied the right to vote in the 2000 presidential election.

In a collective statement, the activists, who were many times beaten and arrested while helping black citizens to register and vote, wrote: "We still mourn the colleagues and friends who lost their lives in the struggle. What is at stake here is precisely what we fought for in the Sixties - the right of everyone to vote and for everyone's vote to be counted."

Among the signatories of the statement is Julian Bond, a longtime SNCC activist and now chairman of the NAACP.

The statement cites accumulating evidence that a disproportionate number of blacks weren't permitted to vote because their names were not listed on voter lists, or because the polls closed while they were waiting on line; and that a disproportionate number of blacks voted in precincts with antiquated equipment so that their votes were not counted. Especially disturbing to these civil rights workers, many of whom in the 1960s experienced abuse and intimidation firsthand, was the odd coincidence of a roadblock set up by state police near a black Tallahassee precinct.

This statement concludes with a demand for a federal investigation and a national call that the exclusion of black voters must never happen again.

The SNCC statement was also endorsed by 300 participants in attendance on Dec. 2 at the Southern Human Rights Conference, as well as the Southern Regional Council and the American Friends Service Committee.

Mendy Samstein, a SNCC veteran of Jackson and McComb, Mississippi, said: "It's encouraging that the Justice Department is apparently starting an inquiry in Florida. We want a full-fledged Justice Department investigation into the many charges of voting exclusion. Mindful of the courage shown by journalists in the Deep South during the 1960s, we also hope that the press will vigorously investigate these charges."

For further information: Mendy Samstein, 607-263-2476 or msamstein@aol.com.

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The full statement and list of signers follow:

As activists in the 1960s struggle of black Americans to achieve voting rights, we believe that far more is at stake in Florida than choosing whether George Bush or Al Gore is to be our next president. In the sixties we fought to overcome a century of systematic and brutal disenfranchisement. Our cry was One Man, One Vote, a cry that resonated throughout this country because it appealed to the basic American sense of justice and fairness.

Today we need to remember the importance of that concept and the sacrifices that were made to ensure its realization. We still mourn the colleagues and friends who lost their lives in the struggle. What is at stake here is precisely what we fought for in the sixties-the right of everyone to vote and for everyone's vote to be counted. One Citizen, One Vote!

Substantial evidence is accumulating that many people were denied the right to vote. Was it just a coincidence that a State Police roadblock was set up near a predominately black precinct in Tallahassee that stopped voters going to the polls? We know that thousands of ballots were not counted in Miami-Dade and Palm Beach counties because machine counts of hand ballots are grossly inaccurate - despite all the hysterical Republican drumbeat to the contrary. We have increasing documentation of thousands of registered voters being turned away because their names were not listed or because their polls closed while they were waiting on line. These are voting injustices that must not be ignored.

We are horrified at the prospect that in the year 2000, we Americans would resign ourselves to the results of an election achieved by questionable and undemocratic means. We urge all Americans who believe in the sacredness of honest elections to support the legal battle for a full and fair counting of the votes in Florida and to demand a Justice Department investigation into incidents of voter irregularities. We must not let this happen again!

Sandra Adickes
Elaine Baker
Frances M. Beal
Debbie Amis Bell
James Bond
Julian Bond
Joan Browning
Ron Carver
Charlie Cobb
Nancy Cooper Samstein
Connie Curry
Dave Dennis
Betty Garman
Ira Grupper
Gene Guerrero
Ed Hamlett
Bruce Hartford
Casey Hayden
Faith S. Holsaert
Matt Jones
Marsha R. Joyner
Mary King
Dorie Ladner Churnet
Joyce Ladner
Julius Lester
Fred Mangrum
Sheila Michael
Mike Miller
Linda Moses Dehnad
Penny Patch
Bill Perlman
Martha Prescod
Judy Richardson
Wally Roberts
Howard Romaine
Dinky Romilly
Mendy Samstein
Cleve Sellers
Judy D. Simmons
Nancy Stearns
Marsha Steinberg
Barbara Summers
Susan Thrasher
Maria Varela
Penny Weaver
Carl Imiola Young
Dorothy M. Zellner
Zoya Zeman
Mitchell Zimmerman
     

Original: COUP WATCH: SNCC Demands Federal Voting Rights Investigation