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The Republican War Against ACORN

by: Jason Leopold, t r u t h o u t | Report

Acorn symbol with shadows.
(Illustration: Jared Rodriguez / t r u t h o u t)

    In recent days, The Washington Post, The New York Times and other major news outlets have recounted the "troubled" history of the poor people's advocacy group ACORN, but left out the five-year anti-ACORN campaign led by White House adviser Karl Rove and other Republican operatives.

    Dropped down the memory hole is the fact that ACORN was at the center of the so-called "prosecutor-gate" scandal, when the Bush administration pressured US attorneys to bring indictments over the grassroots group's voter-registration drives, then fired some prosecutors who resisted what they viewed as a partisan strategy not supported by solid evidence.

    The latest furor over ACORN was touched off by conservative filmmaker James E. O'Keefe III and a right-wing columnist who posed as a couple planning to buy a house for use as a brothel and getting advice from a few ACORN employees, rather than being turned away.

    The pair filmed their meetings at ACORN offices with a hidden camera, producing a video that brought to a fever pitch the long-simmering Republican war against ACORN. The video was trumpeted by Fox News and other right-wing news outlets, starting a stampede in the mainstream press and in Congress, where a majority of panicked Democrats joined the herd in approving legislation to strip ACORN of federal funds.

    The stampede, which trampled ACORN and its mostly black and Hispanic organizing staff, soon pulled in President Barack Obama, who often has touted his work as a community organizer in his youth. In an interview last Sunday on ABC's "This Week," Obama told host George Stephanopoulos that ACORN "deserves to be investigated."

    Yet, while bending to Republican demands to speak out against a poor people's group, Obama continued to resist the notion that powerful Republicans from the Bush administration deserved to be investigated for authorizing the use of torture against prisoners in the "war on terror."

    In an interview with CBS's "Face The Nation," Obama downplayed the seriousness of an investigation authorized last month by Attorney General Eric Holder into several cases where CIA officers allegedly exceeded Justice Department guidelines during interrogations.

    "I have said consistently that I want to look forward and not backward when it comes to some of the problems that occurred under the previous administration, or when it came to interrogations," Obama said. "My understanding is it's not even a criminal investigation at this point."

    That juxtaposition is a stark example of how Republicans - aided by the giant megaphone of the right-wing media - continue to keep Democrats on the defensive, while evidence of Republican guilt gets little sustained attention except at a handful of Internet sites.

    That pattern holds true even for issues connected to ACORN.

    For instance, much less media interest followed the House Judiciary Committee's August release of Bush administration emails related to the role that Rove and other Bush administration officials played in the firings of nine US attorneys amid a Republican effort to target ACORN's voter-registration work during the 2004 presidential election.

    Two of the nine US attorneys who were fired in 2006 were targeted because they refused to bring criminal charges against individuals affiliated with ACORN. The firing of another US attorney was due, in large part, to his refusal to convene a grand jury and secure a voter-fraud indictment against individuals, some of who were affiliated with ACORN.

    A May 2, 2005 email from Rove deputy Scott Jennings to Tim Griffin, another Rove protégé, said that in the fall of 2004, Bernalillo County's Republican Sheriff Darren White and New Mexico Republican Party operatives Pat Rogers and Mickey Barnett turned over hundreds of "suspected fraudulent voter registration forms" handled by ACORN workers. The email was also forwarded to Leslie Fahrenkopf, Bush's associate counsel.

    In 2004, New Mexico was considered a swing state in the Bush-Kerry race and Bernalillo County had been targeted by ACORN for a major grassroots effort to register voters, which resulted in about 65,000 newly registered voters, many of whom were low-income people and minorities - groups that tend to vote for Democrats.

    Sheriff White challenged the integrity of some of the names on the voter registration rolls, according to then-New Mexico US Attorney David Iglesias in his book, "In Justice: Inside the Scandal That Rocked the Bush Administration." White held a press conference along with other Republican officials in the county to call attention to the matter.

    "The purported examples that were then produced included a woman who had correctly filled out two different registrations with slightly different signatures and another in which a husband, with his wife's permission, had signed her name to the form," Iglesias wrote. "It was demanded that I take action against what was perceived as rampant abuse of the system."

    Iglesias said he established an election fraud task force in September 2004 and spent more than two months probing claims of widespread voter fraud in his state. In testimony before a Senate committee in 2007, Iglesias said the task force received about 108 complaints of alleged voter fraud through a hotline over the course of about eight weeks.

    "Most of the complaints made to the hotline were clearly not prosecutable - citizens would complain of their yard signs being removed from their property and de minimis matters like that," Iglesias testified.

    "Only one case of the over 100 referrals had potential. ACORN had employed a woman to register voters. The evidence showed she registered voters who did not have the legal right to vote. The law, 42 USC 1973 had the maximum penalty of 5 years imprisonment and a $5,000 fine.

    "After personally reviewing the FBI investigative report and speaking to the agent, the prosecutor I had assigned, Mr. [Rumaldo] Armijo, and conferring with [a Justice Department official] I was of the opinion that the case was not provable. I, therefore, did not authorize a prosecution.

    "I have subsequently learned that the State of New Mexico did not file any criminal cases as a result of the" election fraud task force.

    Iglesias said Republican officials in his state were far less interested in election reforms and more intent on suppressing votes. He wrote in his book that the Justice Department issued a directive to every US attorney in the country to find and prosecute cases of voter fraud in their states during the height of hotly contested elections in 2002, 2004 and 2006, even though evidence was thin or nonexistent.

    During this period, ACORN had stepped up its voter registration efforts and boasted in press releases about registering tens of thousands of first-time voters.

    Iglesias said that in late summer 2002 he received an email from the Justice Department suggesting "in no uncertain terms" that US attorneys should immediately begin working with local and state election officials "to offer whatever assistance we could in investigating and prosecuting voter fraud cases."

    Pressure also came from congressional and state Republicans. In New Mexico, Barnett, Rogers and White were among Republican operatives who complained directly to Rove at the White House and to officials in Bush's Justice Department that Iglesias would not prosecute ACORN employees. These unhappy Republicans demanded that Iglesias be replaced.

    According to a report by the Justice Department's inspector general released last year, "In a March 2006 email forwarded to [Craig] Donsanto in the [Justice Department's] Public Integrity Section, Rogers complained about voter fraud in New Mexico and added, 'I have calls in, to the USA [U.S. Attorney] and his main assistant, but they were not much help during the ACORN fraudulent registration debacle last election.'"

    In June 2006, Rogers sent Iglesias's Executive Assistant US Attorney Rumaldo Armijo an email which said, "The voter fraud wars continue. Any indictment of the Acorn woman would be appreciated.... The ACLU/Wortheim [sic] democrats will turn to the camera and suggest fraud is not an issue, because the USA would have done something by now. Carpe Diem!" [Carpe Diem is translated, "seize the day."]

    Despite positive job reports, Iglesias was fired in December 2006 as part of a purge of nine federal prosecutors who were deemed not to be "loyal Bushies," or had other supposed shortcomings.

    Last August, Rove went on Fox News to downplay his role in Iglesias's firing, but acknowledged that he did pass on complaints to the Bush Justice Department about "the performance of the US attorney in New Mexico, that he failed to go after ACORN in clear cases of vote fraud."

    The Republican war against ACORN didn't stop with Iglesias.

    In Missouri, former US Attorney Todd Graves was another federal prosecutor who fell into disfavor with the Bush administration because of alleged inaction on ACORN and voter fraud issues.

    Graves would not file criminal charges of voter fraud against four employees of ACORN, according to documents later released by the Justice Department in connection with the fired-prosecutors probe.

    Graves also resisted pressure from Bradley Schlozman, head of the Bush Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, to file a lawsuit against Robin Carnahan, Missouri's Democratic Secretary of State, on charges that Carnahan failed to take action on cases of voter fraud, Graves testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee in 2007.

    Graves was forced to resign in March 2006 and was replaced by Schlozman as Missouri's acting US attorney. Schlozman then filed the civil suit against Carnahan.

    The case was later dismissed by a federal court judge who ruled,
"The United States has not shown that any Missouri resident was denied his or her right to vote as a result of deficiencies alleged by the United States. Nor has the United States shown that any voter fraud has occurred."

    Schlozman also filed federal criminal charges of voter fraud against members of ACORN only days before the November 2006 midterm elections. Schlozman came under criticism for breaking with longstanding Justice Department policy against bringing voter fraud charges close to an election.

    Schlozman testified before a Senate committee in 2007 that he received approval to file the voter fraud charges from a Justice Department ethics official. The Justice Department recently declined to prosecute Schlozman on allegations that he perjured himself during his Senate testimony related to politicized hiring decisions.

    Though the Republican war against ACORN contributed to the "prosecutor-gate" scandal, GOP operatives carried the fight into the 2008 presidential campaign, seizing on some ACORN employees who apparently were padding their registration numbers by submitting bogus forms with fake names like "Mickey Mouse."

    For its part, ACORN has insisted that its own quality control flagged many of the suspicious registration forms before they were submitted to state officials and that state laws often require outside registration groups to submit all forms regardless of obvious problems.

    Independent studies also have shown that phony registrations rarely result in illegally cast ballots because there are so many other safeguards built into the system.

    For instance, from October 2002 to September 2005, a total of 70 people were convicted for federal election-related crimes, according to figures compiled by The New York Times last year. Only 18 of those were for ineligible voting.

    That figure - 70 people - appears in a misleading report released July 23 , a little more than a month before the ACORN videos were broadcast on Fox News. The report was prepared by Rep. Darrell Issa, R-California, the ranking Republican on the House Committee on Government Oversight and Reform.

    The report - entitled "Is ACORN Intentionally Structured As a Criminal Enterprise?" - cites, among other material, several dozen published reports from right-wing commentators and news organizations, including Fox News's Glenn Beck, and Breitbart.com, whose proprietor, Andrew Breitbart, worked closely with Beck and the filmmakers of the ACORN video to demonstrate the organization's involvement in widespread criminal acts related to voter fraud, tax evasion and racketeering.

    In the report, Issa asserts that all 70 people he cites worked specifically for ACORN and were convicted of crimes. However, an in-depth search on Google and Lexis to support this claim does not turn up evidence; it produces only incarnations of the claim itself, which went viral and was picked up by the right-wing echo chamber of news organizations, talk radio and bloggers.

    The actual conviction numbers Issa cites in his report don't add up to 70, and those cases weren't all convictions. Additionally, Issa cites employees who were charged or arrested on suspicion of registering bogus names on voter registration cards but it's unclear whether they were ever convicted.

    According to an Oct. 18, 2008 report in FactCheck.org, "Neither ACORN nor its employees have been found guilty of, or even charged with, casting fraudulent votes," although "several ACORN canvassers have been found guilty of faking registration forms and others are being investigated. But the evidence that has surfaced so far shows they faked forms to get paid for work they didn't do, not to stuff ballot boxes."

    Indeed, the cases suggest that ACORN was the intended victim of the attempted fraud, in that the phony registration forms were part of an effort by employees to exaggerate their work product.

    "No evidence has yet surfaced to show that the ACORN employees who submitted fraudulent registration forms intended to pave the way for illegal voting. Rather, they were trying to get paid by ACORN for doing no work. Dan Satterberg, the Republican prosecuting attorney in King County, Wash., where the largest ACORN case to date was prosecuted, said that the indicted ACORN employees were shirking responsibility, not plotting election fraud."

    The FactCheck.org report was prepared after Republican presidential candidate John McCain jumped on the anti-ACORN bandwagon, citing it at the third presidential debate. He declared ACORN "is now on the verge of maybe perpetrating one of the greatest frauds in voter history in this country, maybe destroying the fabric of democracy."

    The McCain-Palin campaign put out a web ad titled "ACORN," which carried the verbal endorsement of McCain.

    The ad asked, "Who is Barack Obama? A man with 'a political baptism performed at warp speed.' Vast ambition. After college, he moved to Chicago. Became a community organizer. There, Obama met Madeleine Talbot, part of the Chicago branch of ACORN. He was so impressive that he was asked to train the ACORN staff.

    "What did ACORN in Chicago engage in? Bullying banks. Intimidation tactics. Disruption of business. ACORN forced banks to issue risky home loans. The same types of loans that caused the financial crisis we're in today.

    "No wonder Obama's campaign is trying to distance him from the group, saying, 'Barack Obama Never Organized with ACORN.' But Obama's ties to ACORN run long and deep. He taught classes for ACORN. They even endorsed him for President.

    "But now ACORN is in trouble."

    The motive of Republicans in escalating the war on ACORN was suggested by a line in Rep. Issa's report - to delegitimize Obama. On page five, the report states: "Documents provided by former ACORN employees and contained in this report demonstrate the degree to which ACORN and ACORN affiliates organized to elect President Barack Obama in 2008."

    In both today's ACORN attacks and those of the 2008 campaign, the major US news media has mostly ignored the connections to the "prosecutor-gate" case. Last year, the press focused on anecdotes like Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo's name showing up on one registration form.

    The McCain campaign's attempt to politicize ACORN - and hype the danger of voter fraud - also paralleled the allegations made by Republicans during the final days of Campaign 2004.

    In October 2004, Marc Racicot, chairman of the Bush-Cheney 2004 presidential campaign, called on Democratic presidential nominee Sen. John Kerry to demand that ACORN and other voter registration groups stop engaging in voter registration fraud. Racicot said these registration efforts would "ultimately paralyze the effective ability of Americans to be able to vote in the next election."

    Two weeks before the 2004 presidential election, Republican National Committee Chairman Ed Gillespie and Ohio Republican Party Chairman Bob Bennett announced the formation of a media campaign to counter what they claimed was voter registration fraud in nine Ohio counties.

    "The reports of voter fraud in Ohio are some of the most alarming in the nation," Gillespie said on October 20, 2004.

    The attacks on ACORN for allegedly signing up phony voters served as a cover for Republican efforts to purge real voters from the voting roles, a tactic that became infamous in the battleground states of Florida and Ohio.

    In Florida, another battleground state in 2004, President Bush's brother Jeb was governor, and the state's Department of Law launched a statewide probe into voter registration fraud just two weeks before the presidential election. A press release from the Department of Law cited ACORN, which registered more than 212,000 new voters in the state.

    In the two weeks before Election 2004, GOP officials raised similar concerns in Colorado, Minnesota, New Mexico and Pennsylvania.

    Now, having finally succeeded in dealing a severe blow to ACORN with the undercover videos, Republicans are trying to expand the stain to Obama. In a speech on the House floor on Thursday, Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, called Obama "the star of ACORN, the lead, chief organizer.... He walks with them all the way through."

    King then demanded that every House committee launch an investigation into ACORN and criticized "a lame little announcement" that the Justice Department would look into the group's activities.

    At least two Democratic lawmakers, however, want to find out how the congressional backlash against ACORN will impact the low-income families and individuals the organization assists.

    In a two-page letter sent Wednesday to Daniel Mullhollan, director of the Congressional Research Service (CRS), the investigative arm of Congress, House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers and Rep. Barney Frank, chairman of the House Committee on Financial Services, requested that the CRS "research and issue a comprehensive report concerning proposed and pending Congressional and other activity related" to ACORN.

    "Because of the recent charges and countercharges that have been leveled at ACORN and various proposals for action, we believe it is important that CRS conduct a careful and objective analysis of a number of issues concerning ACORN," the letter says.

    Specifically, Conyers and Frank want CRS to provide details about the "pending and proposed [civil, criminal, congressional and internal] investigations" into ACORN, as well as requests for probes by lawmakers; details about the federal funds ACORN has received from various government agencies over the past five years; a description "of all instances, if any where ACORN violated the terms of its federal funding"; and the extent to which ACORN has helped place homeless and low-income families into homes.

    Additionally, Conyers and Frank want the report to include details about the impact on elections from phony voter registration forms ACORN employees have filled out, and whether the undercover videos taken earlier this year at a few ACORN offices violated federal and state wiretapping laws.

    Lastly, CRS was asked to determine whether the "Defund ACORN Act," an amendment sponsored by Issa that passed the House last week and other pieces of legislation aimed at specifically stripping ACORN of federal funds are unconstitutional or "represent an unlawful bill of attainder."

    The claim that the "Defund ACORN Act" represented a bill-of-attainder violation was mentioned by Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-New York, last week after the passage of the amendment.

    "The Constitution says that Congress shall never pass a bill of attainder," Nadler said during a floor speech after last week's vote. "Bills of attainder, no matter what their form, apply either to a named individual or to easily ascertainable members of a group, to inflict punishment. That's exactly what this amendment does.

    "It may be that ACORN is guilty of various infractions, and, if so, it ought to be vetted, or maybe sanctioned, by the appropriate administrative agency or by the judiciary. Congress must not be in the business of punishing individual organizations or people without trial."

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Jason Leopold is the Deputy Managing Editor at Truthout. He is the author of the Los Angeles Times bestseller, News Junkie, a memoir. Visit newsjunkiebook.com for a preview. 

Comments

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If you watch the right-wing

If you watch the right-wing talking heads for any length of time, you realize they can only focus on their symbols. For a while it was Bill Ayres, then it was Van Jones, now it's ACORN. This all follows the advice of Goebbels: keep the lies simple but repeat them over and over.

The political world is

The political world is getting crazier than "I survived a Japanese Game Show." According to a press release by Barney Frank: "ACORN was the recipient of funding throughout the Bush administration, with $14.2 million going from the Bush administration to ACORN through HUD. And I can attest that this was an entirely Executive Branch decision: No congressional action in any way, shape or form required that any of these funds go to ACORN as opposed to other organization. And I do not remember during the period from 2001 to 2006 when the Republicans controlled the White House, HUD, the House and the Senate, and ACORN was receiving millions of dollars, any Republican objection to this." American Politics seem to be written by a modern day Lewis Carroll and delivered to the public via Larry, Moe and Curly. I wonder how many plays Shakespeare could have gotten out of the last 10 years?

Bravo, Spot on this one!

Bravo, Spot on this one! The republicans tend to skirt the fringes of what is legal to further their interests and I feel that they have overstepped the bounds of legal on this one. They are really on the fringe of society just like their tea bagging friends. Keep up the good work.

Employees of Blackwater have

Employees of Blackwater have been convicted of murdering people. Has Congress passed a bill to defund them? Bank of America seems to have cheated in regards to the Merrill takeover. Has Congress passed a bill to defund them? When employees commit violations, they usually get fired and the organization takes steps to see it doesn't happen again. Why must ACORN be destroyed because a few employees screwed up? Oh yeah--they help poor people. Can't have that. Survival of the fittest, you know.

Disenfranchisement of people

Disenfranchisement of people of color and poor people must not be considered a crime, while helping them to obtain the ballot is very easily construed as a criminal act. Would the first Black President dare to comment on the need to ensure the ballot to every "American", which ironically, in some eyes, should also include the poor and people of color? I fear that maybe the rich and the powerful have also silenced the President.

GOP mounts negative attack

GOP mounts negative attack on ACORN; golly gee, the GOP is negative ...

It's the Bull to the

It's the Bull to the Matador's Cape every time! Bravo! While everyone is focusing on poor little ACORN, mighty oaks of money are being felled and harvested by KBR, Halliburton, Blackwater, Wackenhut (is that for real? Bawahahah!)Armor and other various corporations. Billions! Soon, even the pennies begrudged to the people through ACORN will be taken-the bright Sword will soon come out-for too many it already has in the form of lost jobs, houses, health care, and the political drama will be done with another successful kill. And all the Oligarchs have sky-box seats.

My Daughter went to the

My Daughter went to the caucus here in MN. When she got to the site, she found it was surrounded by ACORN members, replete w/shirts and signs supporting Obama. They were yelling and screaming and blocking the entrance. She is a young woman, and was determined to vote (yes she is a Democrat). She had to literally fight her way to get inside. After voting, there were to be meetings and discussions, but she said there was so much yelling and noise from the Obama/ACORN supporters, that she decided to leave and come home. Daughter told me that as she was leaving, she noticed that several elderly persons looked at the mob outside the entrance, and just turned around and left w/o trying to fight their way inside. I wonder at how many places this occurred???? So as far as ACORN is concerned...good riddance to bad rubbish!!!!

So a bunch of poor people

So a bunch of poor people getting loans for low value marginal housing caused the global economic system to crash. They hatched this plot in the offices of an underfund community organization, from behind worn storefronts in inner city communities and rural areas. Somehow, when they weren't trying to keep their kids from getting shot on the sidewalk, they took over control of AIG, manipulated the derivatives market and disrupted the enter international credit system. The manipulated the price of oil an other commodities, unbalancing the market and making billions. Then, despite having become multimillionaires, they went back to their shabby offices after taking over control of the US government to wait to get fired. How incredibly clever the poor are! If their kids didn't go to bed hungry, attend second rate schools and they didn't live in run down apartments, we would all be on to them. So before we defund them, can we contract to have them fix the Middle East? If they're smart enough to do all of this, Palestine should be a half days work for ACORN. The Republicans didn't get close in eight years.

Agreed - let's bring ACORN

Agreed - let's bring ACORN down because a few employees were entrapped and illegally videotaped, but let's NOT even begin to consider taking dowon George and his big Dick for their high crimes and misdemeanors, orchestrated to begin a war, kill and maim hundreds of thousands, bankrupt the country morally and economically, put the US at odds with most of the free world, and incite hatred and terrorism against the US in many parts of the Arab world. And, of course, let's be the cowardly Democrats who care more about being re-elected than about returning American to herself. WAKE UP, MR> PRESIDENT!!!!

25 years ago ACORN worked

25 years ago ACORN worked with the CBOE to help mothers become data entry operators. Some of these hires would become Book Clerks, Quote reporters, Post supervisors, climbing up the Social Ladder while raising a family on their own. This is the ACORN I know, admire and will defend. Can ACORN file Class Action Suit for Libel? It's an idea worth pursuing Can Newscorp, FOX & the GOP afford to settle with interest? Yes They Can. Sincerely, Peter Lott Heppner Chicago

Evenin' Mr. Leopold, 25

Evenin' Mr. Leopold, 25 years ago, ACORN worked with the CBOE to train mothers as Data Entry Operators for OEX Trading Operations. Some of these Hires would become Quote Operators, Book Clerks, Post Supervisors climbing up the Social Ladder while raising families on their own. This is the ACORN I know, admire and will defend. Can ACORN file a Class Action suit for Libel? It bears merit. Can Newscorp, FOX & the GOP afford the fines, the penalties with interest? Yes they Can! Sincerely, Peter Lott Heppner Chicago

They have run the full

They have run the full gambit of dirty tricks and now are flinging feces praying ANYthing will stick for deflection regardless how minuscule from where the main focus MUST GO if the USA can ever be respected by ourselves then one day the world we the people must demand the anchor weight of YET to what is between the lines President Obama is saying; "My understanding is it's not even a criminal investigation at this point."

All the names named and

All the names named and accusations shuffled do not offer a confirmed fact. There is the possibility that the Bush network covered up HUD mortgage guarantees and Fanny May sub-prime mortgages to promote the idea that the neocoms wanted everyone to own a home while feeding the paper profits of the financial markets. That should be investigated. Government by neglect is still a crime. Obama's bailout of the finance and auto industries leaves the private risks to the public and a jobless economy, exactly the results conservatives wished for since Reagan.

The GOP is the party for the

The GOP is the party for the rich and powerful and their ignorant followers while ACORN provides support for those who are not rich and powerful. The GOP leadership and its members have shown they will do anything, legal or illegal to further their ends so the attacks on ACORN are neither surprising nor even that severe when placed into a historical context. At least their members have not been beaten and tear gassed and shot and killed or even jailed - at least not yet.

"the Justice Department

"the Justice Department issued a directive to every US attorney in the country to find and prosecute cases of voter fraud in their states during the height of hotly contested elections in 2002, 2004 and 2006, even though evidence was thin or nonexistent." Hmm, sort of like being ordered to find ties between al-Qaeda and Iraq that didn't exist. I sense a pattern here . . . One of the above posters said "survival of the fittest" referring to the conservative contractors of the Dubya years. I'd suggest changing that to "survival of the fattest".

Should liberals have a

Should liberals have a monopoly on undercover journalism? People in five Acorn offices wanted to help set up brothels for underage girls. Exposing this was really good work. Since the undercover duo did not make it to every Acorn office, it seems likely there are more Acorn employees who would have done the same.

Obama and the democrats

Obama and the democrats bring on these constant unwarranted right-wing attacks by over reacting to every extreme accusation and as Obama likes to say “looking forward not backwards” and “bipartisan compromise.” As long as the right-wing sees a weak administration and Democratic Congress they will continue to attack, that’s what bullies do until you stand up to them. Obama has a record of throwing acquaintances and supporters under the bus when there is the least amount of heat from the whackos on the right. Remember Reverend Wright, Bill Ayers, Van Jones and now Acorn. Who will be next? Obviously, the spineless democrats in Congress overreacted; a better word panicked, when shown the Acorn videos. As usual, our out of touch government and media in Washington place a higher priority on stopping, at best, bad judgment during the entrapment of a few Acorn employees, who help minorities and the poor, than going after the real criminals with government contracts. For example, Black Water (slaughtered civilians in Iraq), KBR (electrocuted sixteen American soldiers in Iraq with faulty showers), Wackenhut (had orgies while guarding the American Afghanistan Embassy), Lockheed Martin (the biggest defense contractor in the world, fined nine times for defrauding the government) and the list goes on. Amazingly, none has lost their funding and still is getting new contracts. Where is the outcry in Congress and the White House to end their funding? Worst yet, where is the investigation of the Bush war crimes? John Edwards was right there are two Americas, one for the rich and powerful that is above the law and the rest of us, who get the book thrown at us for the pettiest offense.

Remember Voters Outreach of

Remember Voters Outreach of American? They threw Democratic voter registrations in the trash. http://www.klas-tv.com/global/story.asp?s=2421595&ClientType=Printable Wonder why the TV media never followed this up?

ACORN isn't the problem.

ACORN isn't the problem. The Republicans in Ohio actually executed voter fraud. There is still one legal case still active (King Lincoln Bronzeville Neighborhood Association v. Blackwell Arnebeck). There is reason to believe that there was also computer fraud associated with Bush's win in Ohio in 2004. It's very strange that all the computer fraud that has been discovered favors Republican candidates.

Let there be light

Let there be light

ACORN has proven that they

ACORN has proven that they will violate the law to achieve their goals. Voter intimidation is their biggest violation in my opinion - they should be disbanded for that alone. ACORN is just a liberal adaptation of the KKK.

I find it interesting that

I find it interesting that you failed to mention anything about Dale Rathke, the brother of ACORN founder Wade Rathke, who stole nearly $1 million from the organization and its affiliates eight years ago. And that the organization kept it quiet, until last year when an ACORN financial supporter heard about it and raised questions about whether its contributions had been misappropriated. Or that in August, two members of an ACORN interim management committee -- Washington, D.C., board member Marcel Reid and Minnesota board member Karen Inman -- filed suit in New Orleans seeking access to financial records and to remove Rathke from all ACORN-affiliated groups. They said a June 20 board resolution directed Rathke to step aside from any activities having to do with ACORN, yet he remains with an affiliated group, New Orleans-based ACORN International, which does human rights work overseas. Marcel Reid and Karen Inman were FORCED to leave ACORN after they requested to look at the books. http://www.nola.com/news/index.ssf/2008/10/lawsuit_over_acorn_files_in_co.html

Perhaps the real reason why

Perhaps the real reason why was because the (Bush) republicans threw both elections by precinct profiling and then challenging the democratic vote for both of the Bush elections but the Bush/Kerry election is what brought this to the attention of the few who were paying close attention. Look up the name Mike Connel + OHIO elections. The Jeb Bush connection in Florida and emails spelling out how it was done..etc. Acorn was funded so the smoke and mirrors could divert the public's attention away from the real issue. The many crimes committed during the Bush administration and those who were responsible walking away free and clear. The problem is corruption in both parties. I love this country for all it once stood for...and the good that is still here. We need ethics and social responsibility restored in Washington. We the people....indeed.!

The attack on ACORN has been

The attack on ACORN has been effective because there is an element of truth to the charges. However, the attack is also fundamentally weak because it is unprincipled. The faux outrage based on accusations of electoral fraud and moral corruption (tax advice to pimps and prostitutes), is being orchestrated by political forces who turn a blind eye (or are culpable) to far greater breaches. Removing legal voters from election rolls, mobs preventing recounts, electronic voting fraud - all far more serious breaches of the public trust. Moral corruption? Huge government contractor DynCorp had senior executives in their Bosnian unit actually running a child prostitution ring. The hot air balloon of BS is easily popped once the outrage trigger is identified.

When I went to a healthcare

When I went to a healthcare town hall this past summer, a woman I met insisted she had read "the bill" -- even though at that time there were 5 bills making their way through Congress. She then gave me a three page print-out of what were obviously Republican talking points with a page number of some item in the bill which rarely even quoted the exact language of the bill, but rather summarized and then commented on the supposed bill and it's problems, usually using "hot" button language. ACORN was mentioned repeatedly and in a distorted context about community involvement in health matters. "Read: ACORN" was the comment on a line in the bill about seeking community input on local hospital expansion projects. Obviously, comments like this were meant not to explain what was intended by the bill, but to press the "hot"buttons of right-wingers.

It may irk the RW that ACORN

It may irk the RW that ACORN helps poor people find housing & jobs, but their real fury is about their registering the poor/minorities to vote, and helping with GOTV efforts. (Hey, they hate unions for the same reasons!) Check out a piece by Byron York - claiming that IF black people could have been prevented from voting... McCain/Palin would have won! Expect everything they've pulled in 2004 & 2008 to be used again in 2012 - and 2010 is not going to be any picnic either! Allow me to digress a bit: Lately I've come to a sort of epiphany - RWers/Republicans consider themselves to be the ruling class: above laws, not subjected to rules, begrudging common courtesy toward anyone outside their ilk. 1) Look at any L/R-D/R face off (as MSNBC calls them) When a question is posed, or an issue brought up, the RWer goes first - talking up a storm (sometimes on topic), then, when it's the Dem/Lib's turn, the RWer chimes in constantly throughout! 2) Look at how congress has been run since 2007, when the Democrats (supposedly) took over. The Repubs dig in their heels and draw lines in the sand, while offering off-the-wall - if any - solutions to our problems, and the Democrats CAVE. When the Pubbies were in the majority, filibusters were tantamount to treason, and reconciliation was patriotic (remember the Nuclear/Constitutional Option?) They used recon rules to pass 2 of Bush's tax giveaways, and attempted to pass ANWAR drilling with it. They ran roughshod over the Dems with 50 seats! But, on 11/8/08, Trent Lott coined a meme "Well, you know it takes 60 votes to move ANYTHING through the senate", kicking off the longest string of filibusters in senate history! (sigh) ..

If Leopold is trying to

If Leopold is trying to persuade us that since the republicans have been harrasing ACORN the charges against them must be false or that since the repubs are playing nasty then it's okay for ACORN to play by their own rules then I couldn't disagree more. He brings up a number of issues in what I see to be strawman arguments and never deals with the reprehensible behavior of the ACORN people. Most of Leopold's argument are about actions taken in the past and are mostly irrelevant today. I know there was much attention payed to the firings of the US attorneys and little came of it so I surmise that there was nothing illegal about it. It seems to me that we are more interested in "our side winning" than we are in nurturing a robust debate, facilitating the propagation and dissemination of ideas so that the very best ideas about governing can be put forth and applied to continually changing and challenging events in our world. I want to see politicians of every ilk give up the dirty tricks, the oversimplifications, the intentionally misleading statements and the downright lies and concern themselves with implementing the very best solutions from whichever side of the aisle they may come. The news media especially irks me. They have been given a vital and sacrosanct part to play in the continuing freedom of this country and instead of making full use of it to preserve freedom they all seem to have their own agendas and report the news in a manner that furthers their agendas rather than so that we, the truth seekers, can get the best possible understanding of current situations. Leopold, in this article, is no exception to that generality.

This entire thing is about

This entire thing is about ACORN registering the poor and minorities who tend to vote Democratic more than Republican. That is the only reason the right-wing is going after them. The Democrats who go along with this, including Obama, are stupid and illogical. That's the best thing I can say about them. They should go after the real criminals, the ones who tortured and committed horrible war crimes, the ones who prevented millions from v0ting or threw out their ballots. And stop acting like the Republicans won the last election. THEY LOST!!!!!!!!!!!

How should the people of

How should the people of 'good will' fight this form of fascism? By exposure through excellent articles like this one, satire (John Stewart) or a recommended read: "The Petite Queen".