Cleveland
Tracy Pierce didn't get to vote. She'd been registered for years but had moved and didn't know that this affected her voting status. She wasn't on any voter list that could be found. An election monitor told her to go to another precinct and ask for a provisional ballot. Another voting adviser told her that, not having voted for a few years and not being in the Board of Elections database, she would likely cast a ballot that would eventually be thrown out. So she went home.
In the excitement over election protection in Ohio and the country, Tracy's is the kind of story that might be seized on as an example of the ways democracy is hobbled. For a time, Ohio's provisional ballots were imagined as "the hanging chads of 2004"--the thing that might swing the election one way or the other--and voting rights, or efforts to suppress them, were made a belated top issue. Outside every polling place in metropolitan Cleveland's black and Latino districts, clusters of people stood in the rain all day wearing black-and-white Election Protection vests, or bright yellow NAACP Voter Protection jackets, or white nylon Democratic Party Voting Rights Team jackets. They were there to inform or intervene or, by their numbers, intimidate would-be intimidators, aka "challengers," whom the Republican Party had announced would be stationed in the polls to demand proof of age, citizenship or residency of voters who appeared suspicious. In the end, the Republican challengers never showed up, at least not in the ways that had been expected in the most heightened fear-forecasts. The early story of the day, as international observers here expressed it, was that civil society had scored a victory over the scandalous grab bag of American elections laws and judicial interpretations and their manipulation by powerful partisan interests.
There were the usual issues at the polls in Ohio, though nothing dramatically systemic, but Tracy Pierce represents something deeper than those. She was disappointed about not voting for what it symbolized. "What will my children think?" she wondered. But as we talked about the candidates, the expectations she had as a black mother in the country's poorest city and the role of politics in her life, she confided, "To be honest, I don't think much of Kerry. I just don't trust that politicians will ever do what they promise...it's like they expect us to be zombies," listen to their promises, believing them long enough to be hooked at election time and then forgetting. Meanwhile, life declines. Driving between polling places on Cleveland's East Side provided a quick refresher on the devastating realities the long campaign never did address. "Maybe I don't feel so bad that I didn't get to vote, thinking about it now," Tracy said finally.
Subscribe Now!
The only way to read this article and the full contents of each week's issue of The Nation online is by subscribing to the magazine. Subscribe now and read this article -- and every article published since for the past five years -- right now.
There's no obligation -- try The Nation for four weeks free.
- Get The Nation at home (and online!) for 75 cents a week!
- If you like this article, consider making a donation to The Nation.

Buzzflash
del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook
Newsvine
Reddit