The Poll Tax, Updated
The New York Times
October 7, 2004
When members of Mi Familia Vota, a Latino group, were registering voters recently on a Miami Beach sidewalk outside a building where new citizens were being sworn in, the Homeland Security Department ordered them to stop. The department gave all kinds of suspect reasons, which a federal court has since rejected, but it looked a lot as if someone at Homeland Security just didn’t want thousands of new Latino voters on the Florida rolls.
The suppression of minority votes is alive and well in 2004, driven by the sharp partisan divide across the nation. Because many minority groups vote heavily
Democratic, some Republicans view keeping them from registering and voting as a tactic for victory – one that has a long history in American politics. It is rarely talked about publicly, but John Pappageorge, a Republican state legislator from Michigan, recently broke the taboo. He was quoted in The Detroit Free Press as saying, “If we do not suppress the Detroit vote, we’re going to have a
tough time in this election cycle.” Detroit’s population is more than 80 percent black.
If the NAACP and the National Council of La Raza had put the energy they used to fight multiracial identity and freedom of choice into voting rights, this situation might not exist.