by Peter Raymond
In yet another scheme to radically transform our country, progressives have quietly carried out their plan to incrementally disenfranchise citizens and grant extraordinary voting rights to non-citizens. This is accomplished by challenging requirements to prove citizenship when registering to vote and replacing the "one man, one vote" principle with proportional voting, a voting method promoted by the far-left Congressional Progressive Caucus as one of their progressive promises to America.
A  review of a recent lawsuit filed against the small Village of Port  Chester in New York illustrates how the left's strategy to undermine the  most fundamental tenet of a representative democracy, the right of citizens to freely elect individuals that represent the interests of the whole community, has been so devastatingly effective.  
Nearly  four years ago, a complaint was filed by the DOJ alleging that the  Village of Port Chester's at-large elections were discriminatory because  no Hispanic candidates had been elected to the board of trustees. The  Justice Department asserted that Hispanics had "less opportunity than  white citizens to participate in the political process," which is in  violation of the Voting Rights Act. 
DOJ  instructed the village to end their 139-year-old at-large election  system, common in small towns throughout New York, and to divide the  tiny 2.1-square-mile village into six districts, with several  specifically configured to have a majority of Hispanics so they may "elect candidates of their choice." 
The  implication of racism within the white voting bloc and the notion of  racially segregating voting districts are certainly appalling, but what  is even more problematic is the large number of non-citizens, including  illegal immigrants, who make up the Hispanic population in Port Chester.  With no effort to differentiate citizens from non-citizens, even a  small minority of legal Hispanic voters could potentially gain enormous  voting leverage over all other citizens in a racially segregated  district -- an outcome social justice zealots would undoubtedly endorse.
United  States District Judge Stephen C. Robinson was so convinced by DOJ  arguments that he ordered the immediate cancellation of the upcoming  election and also suggested  a "six-district plan could be drawn for Port Chester in which Hispanics  would constitute a majority of the citizen voting age population in at  least one district." It is important to note that the judge carefully  skirts the issue of verifying citizenship and references age only as a  prerequisite for establishing a Hispanic majority. This nuance  guarantees that the fabricated "majority" would be composed of a mixture  of citizens and non-citizens.
Robinson reasoned that Hispanics were not "politically astute citizens"  and that they "suffered from the lingering effects of discrimination  that negatively affected their ability to participate in the political  process." It is sad that the judge's recommended remedy for alleged  discrimination is to legally sanction more discrimination.
The remedy  village officials proposed instead is called cumulative voting, a  version of proportional voting. The egregious racial districting plan  was scrapped.
Here  is how it works: "Each voter is given multiple votes, depending on the  number of positions that are open. The voter may cast all of his or her  votes for a single candidate, or may allocate votes among candidates. In  the case of Port Chester, all six Trustee positions will be up for  election. Therefore, each voter in Port Chester will have six votes to  allocate among Trustee candidates; they may cast all six votes for one  Trustee candidate, or split their six votes among the candidates they  prefer."
Robinson  ruled that this method was equitable because "cumulative voting offers a  genuine opportunity for Hispanics in Port Chester to elect their  preferred representative." Apparently, non-Hispanic groups are just out  of luck as far as this judge is concerned.
The village's mayor issued a press release  that outlined his emphatic support of cumulative voting and praised it  as "an improvement over 'winner take all'" elections by giving  individuals "the power to cast more than one vote for the same  candidate." Besides, cumulative voting is "currently is used in more  than sixty American localities, including Peoria (IL) and Amarillo  (TX)."
Well,  the mayor is technically correct that many communities use cumulative  voting; however, all were the result of cases brought under the Voting  Rights Act. Each town or community was literally forced to adopt this  system because "one man, one vote" was determined to be discriminatory  by the DOJ and the federal courts.
Even religious leaders now support some very radical changes to the electorate system including proportional voting.
In Lift Every Voice: Democracy, Voting, and Electoral Reform,  the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church includes in its list of  concerns to address "the structural limits on the principle of 'one  person, one vote'" and the "constraints that continue to be imposed on  African Americans, other persons of color, and poorer and working class  citizens of all races such as purged voter rolls."  
Not  only does the General Assembly endorse restoring voting rights to  convicted felons, but they also favor an avenue for granting voting  rights to non-citizens. "To ensure equality and fairness," the church  leaders "disapprove the imposition of special identification (ID)  requirements that do not provide for opportunities and means by which  all persons may meet the requirements without placing a disproportionate  and undue burden upon any group(s) of persons."  
The  idea of giving non-citizens access to the voting booth is certainly  gaining ground in the courts. On October 26, the infamous U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit  ruled that Arizona's law requiring individuals show proof of  citizenship to register to vote violated the National Voter Registration  Act.  
Thomas  A. Saenz, president of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education  Fund said the Ninth Court's ruling was "a warning to anyone who seeks  to deter or prevent voter participation." According to these folks, if  you live in this country, legally or not, then you have the right to  vote.
As  a final note, apparently, all is not well in social justice utopia of  Port Chester. Last month, the trustees elected under the new cumulative  voting method were considering an appeal of the court's ruling, and the mayor was just arrested for DWI.
Peter Raymond
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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