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ACORN: Labor's Ally Is a Bad Seed
Human Events, Mar 5, 2007 by Osorio, Ivan
One of Big Labor's chief allies in promoting last November's several state ballot initiatives to hike minimum wage rates was the far-left activist group Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN). The group claims that it "helped more ... than 540,000 low-income and minority people register to vole in 2006." The minimum-wage initiatives were part of an ACORN strategy to bring out the Democrats' base by rallying support around the issue.
But some ACORN activists may have committed election fraud. In Missouri, ACORN and its union allies credit the minimum-wage issue with helping put Democrat Claire McCaskiil over the top in her challenge to Republican incumbent Sen. Jim Talent. ACORN's actions have raised eyebrows-and produced federal indictments.
Show Me the Fraud
St. Louis election officials received so many fraudulent voter registration cards from ACORN that they sent letters to 5,000 registrants, asking the recipients to contact them, John Fund reported in the Wall Street Journal. Fewer than 40 of the suspect registrants responded.
The city's elections director, Scott Leiendecker, said some registration cards appeared to be signed by the same person, and some names appeared to be copied straight out of the phone book. For example, Robert S. Rothschild, Jr. and his wife are listed in the white pages as Sandy and Susan Rothschild. They received a letter from the county election board notifying them of their new voter registration as Sandy and Susan Rothschild-each female and each having the same birth date. "Is someone really going to go to our precinct and try to vole? I doubt it very much," Rothschild told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. "Or is this just some sloppy way (for an ACORN worker] to make it appear that they're really doing the work they're hired to do?"
Leiendecker asks a similar question. "It's one of two things," he told the Post-Disptitch. "ACORN needs to look at themselves internally, and their management practices. Something is not clicking. Either that or this group is trying to commit fraud."
ACORN founder Wade Rathke responded to the Missouri findings by calling the election officials "slop buckets" and accusing them of having "broken the law in trying to discourage new voters illegally."
Nonsense, say the officials. "We met twice with ACORN before their drive, but our requests completely fell by the wayside," St. Louis Deputy Elections Director Man Potter, a Democrat, told Fund.
Election officials in Kansas City had similar complaints about voter registrations turned in by ACORN. In October, Kansas City's Republican elections director. Ray James, and his Democratic counterpart, Sharon Turner Buie, said that more than 15,000 registrations were "questionable" for reasons such as duplicates, questionable and unreadable information, or names, addresses and Social Security numbers that don't match actual records, according to the Columbia Daily Tribune.
ACORN claims that the fraudulent registrations were perpetrated by some "temporary workers" whom ACORN caught and fired, and that it brought the matter to the attention of authorities. But Kansas City Board of Elections Chairman Melodie Powell, a Republican, says that these claims are "seriously misleading" and that ACORN helped identify the perpetrators only after her staff took the evidence to the FBI.
On November 2, a federal grand jury in Kansas City indicted four ACORN employees for "knowingly and willingly" submitting false information to election authorities. The four allegedly submitted 15,000 fraudulent voter registration forms-including ones with fake names, signatures or addresses. The charge has maximum penalties of up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
ACORN workers have been convicted of election-related offenses in Wisconsin and Colorado, and investigations have been launched in Ohio, Pennsylvania and Tennessee.
"There's no quality control on purpose, no checks and balances," Nate Toler, an ACORN organizer, told the Journal's Fund. "The internal motto is 'We don't care if it's a lie, just so long as it stirs up the conversation."' He added, "I may have my head chopped off for telling the truth."
Loretta Barton, a former ACORN organizer from Dayton, Ohio, tells a similar tale and says that "all ACORN wanted from registration drives was results."
And what results! In 2004, a worker for an Ohio ACORN affiliate was given crack cocaine in exchange for fraudulent registrations, which included the underage, the deceased and names like Mary Poppins, Dick Tracy and Jive Turkey.
ACORN claims that its errors are the result of honest mistakes. But if that's the case, they reveal a level of incompetence that is plain jaw-dropping. For example, the Kansas City elections office received seven applications signed by the same person during a period of only four days. August 29-31, reported TV station KMBC. ACORN member Todd Elkins, who was at the elections office on October 24, told KMBC reporter Michael Mahoney that it was possible that the person signing was just friendly, "and maybe he kept coming up to our voting canvassers and just signing up." "Seven times?" asked Mahoney. "I'm saying it's a possibility," responded Elkins.