Did You Know

Coalition for Clean Affordable Energy to Host PRC Forum

Six candidates are running for the District 3 vacancy on the Public Regulation Commission. In the coming years, the PRC will make important decisions about energy efficiency, renewable energy, new coal and nuclear plants, new transmission lines, wind and solar power, and policies to address global warming.


The Coalition for Clean Affordable Energy is hosting a forum on May 7th so voters can learn about where the candidates stand on these and other issues. All six candidates (Jerome Block Jr. Paul Campos, Louis Gallegos, Joseph Maestas, Arthur Rodarte and Bruce Throne) have agreed to attend, so this is your chance to ask them questions in a face-to-face setting.

KSFR Radio news director Bill Dupuy will moderate the forum, and Tom Singer, energy policy analyst for the NRDC Action Fund, will be on hand to answer any additional questions you may have.

== When and Where ==
Wednesday, May 7
7:00-8:30pm
Unitarian Church of Santa Fe, Folgelson Hall
107 West Barcelona (at Galisteo)
Santa Fe

Did the US Supreme Court Just Elect John McCain?

Link: Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman | Did the US Supreme Court Just Elect John McCain?.

    The US Supreme Court has just dealt a serious blow to voters' rights that could help put John McCain in the White House by eliminating tens of thousands of voters who generally vote Democratic.

    By 6-3 the Court has upheld an Indiana law that requires citizens to present a photo identification card in order to vote. Florida, Michigan, Louisiana, Georgia, Hawaii and South Dakota have similar laws. Though it's unlikely, as many as two dozen other states could add them by election day. Other states, like Ohio, have less stringent ID requirements than Indiana's, but still have certain restrictions that are strongly opposed by voter rights advocates.

    The decision turns back two centuries of jurisprudence that has accepted a registered voter's signature as sufficient identification for casting a ballot. By matching that signature against one given at registration, and with harsh penalties for ballot stuffing, the Justices confirmed in their lead opinion that there is "no evidence" for the kind of widespread voter fraud Republican partisans have used to justify the demand for photo ID.

    Voting rights activists have long argued that since photo ID can cost money, or may demand expensive trips to government agencies, the requirement constitutes a "poll tax." Taxes on the right to vote were used for a century to prevent blacks and others from voting in the south and elsewhere. They were specifically banned by the 24th Amendment to the Constitution, ratified in 1964.

    But the Court's lead opinion, written by Justice Stevens, normally a liberal, said that though rare, the "risk of voter fraud" was nonetheless "real" and that there was "no question about the legitimacy or importance of the state's interest in counting only the votes of eligible voters." The burden of obtaining a voter ID, said the court, was not so difficult as to be deemed unConstitutional. Ohio election protection Attorney Cliff Arnebeck believes Stevens joined the decision to divide the Court's conservative majority, and to leave the door open for further litigation.

    But there is no indication the corporate media or Democratic Party will be pursuing significant action on this issue any time soon. Though the Kerry Campaign solicited millions of dollars to "protect the vote" in 2004, it has not supported independent research into that election's irregularities. In the King-Lincoln Civil Rights lawsuit, in which we are attorney and plaintiff, 56 of Ohio's 88 counties destroyed ballot materials, in direct violation of federal law. There has been no official legal follow-up on this case, no major media investigation, and no support from the Democratic Party either to investigate what happened in Ohio 2004, or to make sure it doesn't happen again in 2008. The issue has yet to be seriously raised by the major Democratic candidates despite the fact that it could render their campaigns moot.

    This latest Supreme Court decision is yet another serious blow to voting rights advocates - and probably to the Democratic nominees for President and other offices. It will clearly make it far more difficult for poor, minority, elderly and young citizens to vote. Tens of thousands of normally Democratic voters in key states - especially Florida, Michigan, Georgia and Louisiana - will simply be prevented from getting a ballot.


Democrats Registering In Record Numbers - washingtonpost.com

Link: Democrats Registering In Record Numbers - washingtonpost.com.

RALEIGH, N.C. -- They lined up shoulder to shoulder inside the gray high-rise downtown, their politics as diverse as their backgrounds. An ex-felon who needs health insurance, followed by a high school student seeking empowerment, followed by a Marine Corps veteran who wants to prevent his country from crumbling.

Cutoffs and Pleas for Aid Rise With Heat Costs - New York Times

Link: Cutoffs and Pleas for Aid Rise With Heat Costs - New York Times.

After struggling with soaring heating costs through the winter, millions of Americans are behind on electric and gas bills, and a record number of families could face energy shut-offs over the next two months, according to state energy officials and utilities around the country.

AlterNet: Democracy and Elections: Bad Voter Lists May Have Botched New Mexico's Democratic Caucus

Link: AlterNet: Democracy and Elections: Bad Voter Lists May Have Botched New Mexico's Democratic Caucus.

Democratic party officials in New Mexico may have used an incomplete list of registered voters on Super Tuesday -- prepared for the Secretary of State by a private vendor -- causing nearly 13 percent of Democrats to find they were not on precinct voter rolls when they showed up to choose a presidential nominee.

As a result, the New Mexico Democratic Party is now in the process of validating and counting more than 17,000 provisional ballots. That count will likely determine who won the nation's closest Democratic nominating contest so far in 2008. It is unclear whether the voter list that resulted in so many provisional ballots -- or an updated list -- will be used to verify, validate and count the 17,000 votes.

With 183 out of 184 precincts reporting, Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY) held a lead of 1,092 votes -- 67,921 votes compared to 66,829 for Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), according to the Associated Press. That tally does not include the provisional ballot count.


US Military Deaths in Iraq at 3,931 - washingtonpost.com

Link: US Military Deaths in Iraq at 3,931 - washingtonpost.com.

-- As of Wednesday, Jan. 23, 2008, at least 3,931 members of the U.S. military have died since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count. The figure includes eight military civilians. At least 3,197 died as a result of hostile action, according to the military's numbers.

The AP count is two higher than the Defense Department's tally, last updated Wednesday at 10 a.m. EST.

The British military has reported 174 deaths; Italy, 33; Ukraine, 18; Poland, 21; Bulgaria, 13; Spain, 11; Denmark, seven; El Salvador, five; Slovakia, four; Latvia, three; Estonia, Netherlands, Thailand, Romania, two each; and Australia, Hungary, Kazakhstan, South Korea, one death each.


State Employees won't get time-off to vote in Caucus

MemoToAgencies-DemocraticCaucusVoting-1-18-088.png

NH Recount Uncovers Discrepancies -- Result of Human Error Officials Say | Threat Level from Wired.com

Link: NH Recount Uncovers Discrepancies -- Result of Human Error Officials Say | Threat Level from Wired.com.

A recount of the New Hampshire Democratic primary is underway in two counties in that state, and already the internet is abuzz over initial figures that show some clear discrepancies on optical-scan ballots cast in two polling locations in Hillsborough County, though officials say the discrepancies are the result of human error rather than machine error. As you recall, Democratic presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich and Republican presidential candidate Albert Howard asked the state to recount the primary ballots after a blogger posted a chart showing that Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama received more votes than Hillary Clinton in regions where officials counted the paper ballots by hand than in regions where they were counted by optical-scan machines made by Diebold Election Systems and that Republican presidential candidate John McCain also received more votes than Mitt Romney in hand-counted districts over machine-counted ones. The implication was that Clinton and Romney somehow benefitted from the optical-scan machines.

Voter Beware

Link: Voter Beware.

Secretary of State may lack adequate personnel.

An intense 2008 election cycle looms for New Mexico, but the state may not be prepared to handle it.

New Mexico is slated to use the ES&S M100 optical scanner in the ’08 elections.
SFR has learned that none of the three employees listed by the Office of the Secretary of State (SOS) as voting machine supervisors in fact currently hold that position, nor are they certified to use the Election Systems & Software (ES&S) system that will be deployed statewide to tally paper ballots.

This year, for both the primary and general elections, the state will only utilize paper ballots. Those ballots will be read by the ES&S M100 optical scanner.

An organizational chart for the SOS submitted to the Ethics Subcommittee of the Legislative Council on Oct. 24 lists Daniel Gutierrez, Patricia Rael and Manny Vildasol as voting machine supervisors, a position mandated by state law and required to be filled by individuals who are “knowledgeable in the mechanical operation, repair and maintenance of voting machines used in this state.”

The election code provision adds that the state voting machine supervisor “shall provide assistance to counties” in the repair, maintenance, care and proper use of voting machines.

A source familiar with the workings of the SOS confirms to SFR that there is no employee on staff who presently fulfills the legal requirement of voting machine supervisor.

According to a receptionist in the SOS’s office, Gutierrez retired on Jan. 5.


Al Kamen - What Was in That Office, Anyway? You Tell Us. - washingtonpost.com

Link: Al Kamen - What Was in That Office, Anyway? You Tell Us. - washingtonpost.com.

That fire in Vice President Cheney's digs in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on Wednesday naturally has everyone in Washington speculating about its origin. Arson might seem a bit far-fetched to folks outside the Beltway, but it would not be the first time a small conflagration was planned by a White House official.

We recall that Watergate burglary mastermind G. Gordon Liddy plotted firebombing the Brookings Institution -- "as a diversion," he writes in his memoirs -- to get into the security vault and steal Daniel Ellsberg's Vietnam War papers.