Synopses & Reviews
A controversial examination of how our political system, despite "get out the vote" rhetoric, works to suppress the voteespecially the votes of African Americans."Karl Rove began to impress upon leading Republicans...that...one way to address the party's electoral problem...was to suppress black and Hispanic turnouta task that would become far easier if the airwaves were buzzing with news of voter-fraud indictments."Harold Meyerson, The Washington Post
Today, over forty years after the Voting Rights Act of 1965 demolished bars to voting for African Americans, the effort to prevent black peopleas well as Latinos and the poor in generalfrom voting is experiencing a resurgence. A myriad of new tactics, some of which adopt the mantle of "election reform," has evolved to suppress the vote. In this sharply argued new book, three of America's leading experts on party politics and elections demonstrate that our political system is as focused on stopping people from voting as on getting Americans to go to the polls.
In recent years, the Republican Party, the Bush administration, and the conservative movement have devoted a remarkable amount of effort to controlling election machinery (the scandal over federal prosecutors was in part over their refusal to gin up election-fraud cases). But Keeping Down the Black Vote shows that the effort to rig the system is as old as American political parties themselves, and race is at the heart of the game.
Synopsis
A controversial examination of how our political system, despite "Get Out the Vote" rhetoric, works to suppress the vote--especially the votes of African Americans Today, over forty years after the Voting Rights Act of 1965 demolished bars to voting for African Americans, the effort to prevent black people--as well as Latinos and the poor in general--from voting is experiencing a resurgence. A myriad of new tactics, some of which adopt the mantle of "election reform," has evolved to suppress the vote. In this sharply argued new book, three of America's leading experts on party politics and elections demonstrate that our political system is as focused on stopping people from voting as on getting Americans to go to the polls.
In recent years, the Republican Party, the Bush administration, and the conservative movement have devoted a remarkable amount of effort to controlling election machinery (the scandal over federal prosecutors was in part over their refusal to gin up election-fraud cases). But Keeping Down the Black Vote shows that the effort to rig the system is as old as American political parties themselves, and race is at the heart of the game.
Synopsis
"Keeping Down the Black Vote" offers a controversial examination of how the American political system works to suppress the vote--especially the votes of African Americans and minorities.
About the Author
Frances Fox Piven is Distinguished Professor of Political Science and Sociology at The Graduate Center, CUNY, and the author (with the late Richard A. Cloward) of The Breaking of the American Social Compact (The New Press), among many other books. Margaret Groarke is an assistant professor in the government department and the director of the peace studies program at Manhattan College. Lorraine C. Minnite is an assistant professor of political science at Barnard College. All three live in New York City.