November 4, 2019 • 5
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With the U.S. presidential cycle
gearing up, Elizabeth Vos takes stock of lessons from 2016.
By Elizabeth Vos
Special to Consortium News
Special to Consortium News
Establishment Democrats and
those who amplify them continue to project blame for the public’s doubt in
the U.S. election process onto outside influence, despite the clear history of
the party’s subversion of election integrity. The total inability of the
Democratic Party establishment’s willingness to address even one of these
critical failures does not give reason to hope that the nomination process in
2020 will be any less pre-ordained.
The Democratic Party’s bias
against Sen. Bernie Sanders during the 2016 presidential nomination, followed
by the DNC defense counsel doubling down on its right to rig the race during
the fraud
lawsuit brought against the DNC, as well as the irregularities in the races
between former DNC Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz and Tim Canova, indicate
a fatal breakdown of the U.S. democratic process spearheaded by the Democratic
Party establishment. Influences transcending the DNC add to concerns regarding
the integrity of the democratic process that have nothing to do with Russia,
but which will also likely impact outcomes in 2020.
The content of the DNC and Podesta emails published
by WikiLeaks demonstrated that the DNC acted in favor of Hillary
Clinton in the lead up to the 2016 Democratic primary. The emails also revealed
corporate media reporters acting as surrogates of
the DNC and its pro-Clinton agenda, going so far as to promote Donald Trump
during the GOP primary process as a preferred “pied-piper candidate.” One cannot
assume that similar evidence will be presented to the public in 2020, making it
more important than ever to take stock of the unique lessons handed down to us
by the 2016 race.
Social Media Meddling
Election meddling via social
media did take place in 2016, though in a different guise and for a different
cause from that which are best remembered. Twitter would eventually admit
to actively suppressing hashtags
referencing the DNC and Podesta emails in the run-up to the 2016 presidential
election. Additional reports indicated
that tech giant Google also showed measurable “pro-Hillary Clinton bias” in
search results during 2016, resulting in the alleged swaying of between 2 and
10 millions voters in favor of Clinton.
On the Republican side, a
recent episode of CNLive! featured
discussion of the Cambridge Analytica scandal, in which undecided voters were
micro-targeted with tailored advertising narrowed with the combined use of big
data and artificial intelligence known collectively as “dark strategy.” CNLive! Executive
Producer Cathy Vogan noted that SCL, Cambridge Analytica’s parent company,
provides data, analytics and strategy to governments and military organizations
“worldwide,” specializing in behavior modification. Though Cambridge Analytica
shut down in 2018, related companies remain.
The Clinton camp was hardly
absent from social media during the 2016 race. The barely-legal activities
of Clintonite David Brock were previously reported by
this author to have included $2 million in funding for the creation of an
online “troll army” under the
name Shareblue. The LA Times described
the project as meant to “to appear to be coming organically from people and
their social media networks in a groundswell of activism, when in fact it is
highly paid and highly tactical.” In other words, the effort attempted to
create a false sense of consensus in support for the Clinton campaign.
In terms of interference in
the actual election process, the New York City Board of Elections was shown to
have purged over one hundred
thousand Democratic voters in Brooklyn from the rolls before the 2016 primary,
a move that the Department of Justice found broke federal law.
Despite this, no prosecution for the breach was ever attempted.
Though the purge was not
explicitly found to have benefitted Clinton, the admission falls in line with
allegations across the country that the Democratic primary was interfered with
to the benefit of the former secretary of state. These claims were further bolstered
by reports indicating that
voting results from the 2016 Democratic primary showed evidence of fraud.
DNC Fraud Lawsuit
The proceedings of the DNC
fraud lawsuit provide the most damning evidence of the failure of the U.S.
election process, especially within the Democratic Party. DNC defense lawyers
argued in open court for the party’s right
to appoint candidates at its own discretion, while simultaneously
denying any “fiduciary duty” to represent the voters who donated to the
Democratic Party under the impression that the DNC would act impartially
towards the candidates involved.
In 2017, the Observer reported that the DNC’s
defense counsel argued against claims that the party defrauded Sanders’
supporters by favoring Clinton, reasoning that Sanders’ supporters knew the
process was rigged. Again: instead of arguing that the primary was neutral and
unbiased in accordance with its charter, the DNC’s lawyers argued that it was
the party’s right to select candidates.
The Observer noted
the sentiments of Jared Beck, the attorney representing the plaintiffs of the
lawsuit:
…“People paid money in
reliance on the understanding that the primary elections for the Democratic
nominee —nominating process in 2016 were fair and impartial, and that’s not
just a bedrock assumption that we would assume just by virtue of the fact that
we live in a democracy, and we assume that our elections are run in a fair and
impartial manner. But that’s what the Democratic National Committee’s own
charter says. It says it in black and white.”
The DNC defense counsel’s
argument throughout the course of the DNC fraud lawsuit doubled down repeatedly
in defense of the party’s right to favor one candidate over another, at one
point actually claiming that such favoritism was protected by the First Amendment. The
DNC’s lawyers wrote:
“To recognize any of the
causes of action that Plaintiffs allege would run directly contrary to
long-standing Supreme Court precedent recognizing the central and
critical First Amendment rights enjoyed by political parties, especially
when it comes to selecting the party’s nominee for public office.” [Emphasis
added]
The DNC’s shameless defense of
its own rigging disemboweled the most fundamental organs of the U.S. body
politic. This no indication that the DNC will not resort to the same
tactics in the 2020 primary race,
Tim Canova’s Allegations
If Debbie Wasserman Schultz’s
role as disgraced chairwoman of the DNC and her forced 2016 resignation wasn’t
enough, serious interference was also alleged in the wake of two contests
between Wasserman Schultz and professor Tim Canova in Florida’s 23rd
congressional district. Canova and Wasserman Schultz first faced off in a 2016
Democratic primary race, followed by a 2018 general congressional election in
which Canova ran as an independent.
Debacles followed both
contests, including improper vote counts, illegal ballot destruction,
improper transportation of
ballots, and generally shameless displays
of cronyism. After the controversial results of the initial primary race
against Wasserman Schultz, Canova sought to have ballots checked for
irregularities, as the Sun-Sentinel reported
at the time:
“[Canova] sought to look at
the paper ballots in March 2017 and took Elections Supervisor Brenda Snipes to
court three months later when her office hadn’t fulfilled his request. Snipes
approved the destruction of the ballots in September, signing a certification
that said no court cases involving the ballots were pending.”
Ultimately, Canova was granted
a summary judgment against Snipes, finding that she had committed what amounted
to multiple felonies. Nonetheless, Snipes was not prosecuted and remained
elections supervisor through to the 2018 midterms.
Republicans appear no more
motivated to protect voting integrity than the Democrats, with The
Nation reporting that the GOP-controlled Senate blocked a bill this
week that would have “mandated paper-ballot backups in case of election machine
malfunctions.”
Study of Corporate Power
A 2014 study published
by Princeton University found that corporate power had usurped the voting
rights of the public: “Economic elites and organized groups representing
business interests have substantial independent impacts on U.S. government
policy, while average citizens and mass-based interest groups have little or no
independent influence.”
In reviewing this sordid
history, we see that the Democratic Party establishment has done everything in
its power to disrespect voters and outright overrule them in the democratic
primary process, defending their right to do so in the DNC fraud lawsuit. We’ve
noted that interests transcending the DNC also represent escalating threats to
election integrity as demonstrated in 2016.
Despite this, establishment
Democrats and those who echo their views in the legacy press continue to
deflect from their own wrongdoing and real threats to the election process by
suggesting that mere discussion of it represents a campaign by Russia to attempt
to malign the perceptionof the legitimacy of the U.S. democratic process.
Hillary Clinton’s recent
comments to the effect that Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard is being “groomed” by
Russia, and that the former Green Party Presidential candidate Dr. Jill Stein
is a “Russian asset”, were soon echoed by DNC-friendly pundits. These
sentiments externalize what Gabbard called the
“rot” in the Democratic party outward onto domestic critics and a nation across
the planet.
Newsweek provided a particularly
glaring example of this phenomenon in a recent op-ed penned by columnist Naveed
Jamali, a former FBI double agent whose book capitalizes on Russiagate. In an
op-ed titled: “Hillary Clinton Is Right. Tulsi Gabbard Is A Perfect
Russian Asset – And Would Be A Perfect Republican Agent,” Jamali argued:
“Moscow will use its skillful
propaganda machine to prop up Gabbard and use her as a tool to delegitimize
the democratic process.” [Emphasis added]
Jamali surmises that Russia
intends to “attack” our democracy by undermining the domestic perception of its
legitimacy. This thesis is repeated later in the piece when Jamali opines: “They want to see a retreat of
American influence. What better way to accomplish that than to attack our
democracy by casting doubt on the legitimacy of our elections.” [Emphasis
added]
The only thing worth
protecting, according to Jamali and those who amplify his work (including
former Clinton aide and establishment Democrat Neera Tanden), is the perception of
the democratic process, not the actual functioning vitality of it. Such
deflective tactics ensure that Russia will continue to be used as a convenient
international pretext for silencing
domestic dissent as we move into 2020.
Given all this, how can one
expect the outcome of a 2020 Democratic Primary — or even the general election
– to be any fairer or transparent than 2016?
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