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ACLU
SUES TO PROTECT EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
Oklahoma
voters filed a protest on March 7, 2008 before the state Supreme
Court challenging irregularities and questionable practices in
the collection of signatures by the so-called Oklahoma Civil
Rights Initiative. The initiative is one of a series of ballot
measures that California businessman Ward Connerly and his
organization known as the American Civil Rights Institute (ACRI)
have spearheaded across the country.
“When equal opportunity and the civil rights of our residents
are at stake, it is critically important that the electoral
process is fair, transparent and honest,” said Chuck Thornton,
Legal Director of the ACLU of Oklahoma. “We are confident that
this review will confirm what has already been discovered – the
signature-gathering process was riddled with errors.”
The legal challenge follows the Oklahoma Supreme Court’s
certification of the ballot measure’s signatures and Monday’s
publication of the signatures’ alleged sufficiency by Secretary
of State M. Susan Savage. Last month, Savage noted in a letter
to the court that the signature count “has resulted in an
unprecedented situation where large numbers of duplicate names
and addresses were discovered well into the signature counting
process….[and] it is a reasonable assumption that not all
duplicates have been discovered.” Savage also noted that her
report to the court took much more time to compile than usual
“due to the scope and number of irregularities noted among the
signature pages.” Among the irregularities Savage noted were
numerous instances of circulators signing their own petitions
multiple times.
If this measure – initiated and funded by California-based
interests – appears on the ballot, it would threaten access to
equal opportunity for countless Oklahomans. Connerly’s similar
ballot initiative in California dramatically reduced the
participation of women and minorities in higher education,
contracting, and employment. After it passed in 1996, the number
of women employed in California’s construction industry declined
by 33 percent. The number of minority businesses in the state’s
transportation construction industry declined even more sharply,
with just a third of such enterprises in existence in 1996 still
in business by 2006.
“It is well known that Connerly and his front groups have
repeatedly misappropriated the language of the civil rights
movement to trick voters into ending equal opportunity programs
in states across the country. But we the voters of Oklahoma must
not be fooled,” said State Representative Mike Shelton,
D-Oklahoma City. “Although we are strongly opposed to the
content of this ballot measure, today’s challenge is about
protecting the integrity of the electoral process in the state
of Oklahoma.”
In addition to Representative Shelton, individuals bringing this
challenge include Representative Jabar Shumate, Fannie Bates,
Randall T. Coyne, Bob Darcy, Bernadette Huber, Rey Madrid,
Bernice Mitchell, Earl D. Mitchell, Jr., and Juanita Vasquez
Sykes.
Recently, Oklahoma Attorney General Drew Edmondson revised the
ballot measure’s title to make clear to voters that Connerly’s
initiative threatens to dismantle affirmative action programs in
the state. Nationwide, courts have repeatedly recognized that
the intent of these initiatives is to eliminate programs that
promote equal access and opportunities for women and minorities.
Reports indicate that ACRI has used misleading practices in
nearly every state in which it has introduced initiatives. |