Claim Democracy
Claim Democracy encourages networking and collaboration among national, state and local democracy groups in order to build support for and strengthen a national infrastructure for a pro-democracy movement within the United States.  Its most significant accomplishment thus far has been our November 2003 and 2007 Claim Democracy conferences, which brought together representatives of more than 100 organizations and more than 500 people for intensive private meetings and public dialogue inWashington, D.C. In light of recent election administration problems and high-profile obstacles to fair elections in the public interest, its major goal for 2008 is the Democracy SoS (Secretary of State) project, designed to develop a comprehensive agenda for action by Secretaries of State and other elected officials who influence election policy.

The vision for Claim Democracy is to help create and support a network of state-based organizations that work to secure, enhance and exercise the right vote through a range of reforms and activities. Rather than exclusively focus on one particular reform or another, these organizations would be able to coordinate and pool resources to advocate one of a number of reforms that meet clear pro-democracy goals. Examples include: expanding the electorate, increasing citizen participation, providing fair representation, promoting better political debate, freeing voters to support their candidate of choice and supporting equality in the political process. Potential activities include plans to:
  • Establish a new website with a range of information about pro-democracy issues, blogs from several leading pro-democracy advocates and easy means to find pro-democracy advocates in one’s state or locality. An internal invitation-only set of pages would facilitate communication among leaders of pro-democracy groups.

  • Promote creation of and support for a network of state and local groups working to promote participation and reform in their state – ideally seeking to integrate efforts to boost citizen participation with reform efforts and seeking to establish lasting relationships with elected officials able to enact change.

  • Coordinate regular meetings of a pro-democracy roundtable of national and local groups, designed to promote strategic thinking, greater communication and coordination in the pro-democracy movement and support for state/local efforts.

  • Develop a “war-room” communications ability able to spotlight deficits in our democracy and work being done to address those efforts.

  • Develop and work with caucuses of pro-democracy elected officials, at local, state and federal levels – coordinating strategic initiatives that can be carried out at different levels.

  • Develop curriculum about the history of expansion of democracy in the United States as a whole and individual states to be used in K-12 schools.


 
A primary concern for taxpayers
Published April 7th 2008 in The Grand Rapid Newspaper
Away from the continuing drama surrounding Michigan's presidential primary -- Will Democrats revote? Will delegates be seated? -- is a more fundamental question: Who should have access to the information generated by the Jan. 15 election?

The obvious answer, just affirmed by a federal court in Detroit, is that the data should not be reserved exclusively for an elite political class -- the leaders of the Democratic and Republican parties. Taxpayers funded the election. They should have access to it, too.

The ruling overturned a crucial portion of the state law that created the primary. The law required that only political party leaders would receive the lists of those who selected either Democratic or Republican ballots. The lists are valuable for fund-raising, recruiting and targeting automated telephone calls.

The arrangement is patently unfair, a violation of the constitutional right to equal treatment under the law, as U.S. District Judge Nancy G. Edmunds ruled. The suit against Secretary of State Terri Lynn Land was brought by the Green Party, Libertarian Party and Reform Party, in addition to the Metro Times newspaper and political consultant David Forsmark. All wanted the lists for their own purposes.

"The State is not required to provide the party preference information to any party," Judge Edmunds wrote in her opinion. "When it chooses to do so, however, it may not provide information only to the major political parties."

In the wake of that decision, Ms. Land has decided not to give the lists to anyone, at least until the court's ruling is thoroughly scoured by her lawyers. In fact, the lists of Democratic and Republican voters in the primary don't even exist right now and haven't been compiled by local elections officials or the secretary of state. However, just as lists of whether citizens vote (but not for who or what party) are public information, these lists ought to be as well. The key point from Judge Edmunds' rulings is not that the lists should be kept under wraps, but that they should be handled fairly.

Voters , naturally, fear that this information will be used to bombard them with unsolicited election material. The solution there is not to muzzle political parties or halt the dissemination of public information. The solution is to more evenly regulate political advertising in the state, something legislators have failed miserably to do.

In particular, lawmakers need to better control those annoying robotic telephone calls -- robo-calls -- which voters will receive this fall regardless of the availability of the Jan. 15 voter lists. Currently, the calls can be made anonymously. Sometimes, that cloak of secrecy has been used for false attacks in the final hour of campaigns. That is in sharp contrast to other forms of political advertising such as mailings, radio and television commercials which require tag lines explaining who paid for and sponsored the material.

The principle there is the same as the principle outlined by Judge Edmunds regarding the primary information: equal and fair treatment. In both cases, political leaders have cravenly put their own perceived interests ahead of the people they serve.