Opinion
Montana Republicans' dirty tricks have no place in the election
Story by Virginia J. Cleaveland | October, 8 2008
Montana Kaimin
I hope the Montana Republican Party wasn’t trying to bolster its image by challenging voter eligibility in Montana. It was trying to garner attention, maybe. But in my mind, the image of the Republicans as a “for the people” party was completely ruined by its actions this past week.
That the Republican Party withdrew its challenge Tuesday night confirmed my suspicion that the challenge was nothing but a dirty political trick.
What the Montana Republican Party tried to do was illegal. Completely, utterly, illegal. It is not just illegal in Montana—it is illegal nationwide, and there is a federal law in place which prohibits exactly what the party attempted to do. Had the complaint filed against the Republicans made it to court in Missoula, I know the judge would have ruled the party’s actions illegal.
According to the complaint filed on Oct. 6 against the Montana Republican Party, “within 90 days of a primary or general election for Federal office, the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 prohibits states from systematically reviewing the registration rolls for ineligible voters.”
The National Voter Registration Act states that the only time a state can review voter registration in that 90–day period is at the request of the voter; if the state wants to question the criminal record or mental incapacity of a voter; or if the state wants to question if a voter is still alive.
According to the complaint, Montana has adopted some of the provisions of the NVRA, “including the 90-day prohibition on systematic review of voters’ registration status.”
Last time I checked, the election was 27 days away, which certainly falls within this 90-day period.
Maybe if just one person in the Montana Republican Party had any brains at all, or if one person had bothered to do some research on voters’ laws and rights, the party wouldn’t have made the reckless decision to challenge voter eligibility that it did.
It would have prevented a lot of negative attention from both the press and the public.
As a first-time voter in a presidential election, I now have no faith in the Republican Party.
Republicans have proven they can do nothing for me in the upcoming election except attempt to take away my right to vote. Why would I support a party that is trying to use scare tactics on the people who are solely responsible for keeping it alive?
Disenfranchising voters is not a way to win an election.
It’s a way to make your party look like it succumbs to the dirty tricks and flat-out lies that the American people are trying to get out of the White House.
Do yourself, and all citizens of the United States, a favor and show up to vote on Nov. 4. The worst thing that will happen is that you will have to take a few extra minutes to update your address when you arrive at your polling station.
Don’t give in to any dirty tricks in this election. Politicians’ dirty tricks are child’s play, and some of us have grown up and left the sandbox.
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Comments
While the writer of this article showed a rather shallow and/or naive understanding of how voting tends to happen in this country, most will be able to give her a pass since she hasn’t ever voted in a presidential election before. However, if the writer hopes to persuade anyone about her point of view with this piece, the snarky tone and very weak conclusions about the Republican Party’s actions do not bode well for her cause. Trying to comply with national laws hardly constitutes a “dirty trick,” and pretending that some college journalism student is somehow smarter than the whole Republican Party in the state of Montana is laughable. Unfortunately, if the writer here read around a little bit before spewing her little tirade, she would have found that nationwide there are people running into problems with voter registrations, and that neither party appears responsible on the face for the problems. If a party trying to stay inside the law amounts to “scare tactics,” no one would ever vote again. According to the NYT, this author is going to have no confidence in voting ever again!
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/09/us/politics/09voting.html?hp
Posted by jon_e_33 on 10/08/2008 at 11:28 pm
