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Fly by night Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-19-09 09:41 AM
Original message
A New (Republican) Hero Enters Tennessee's History Books
Edited on Fri Jun-19-09 10:11 AM by Fly by night
I just wrote this tribute about one of our state Senators, Tim Burchett of Knoxville. Read and appreciate the singular courage that this young Republican displayed late last night in our state's Senate to save our democracy. I am submitting this tribute to the Knoxville newspapers and hope that the will publish it. FBN
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A New Hero Enters Tennessee's History Books

Every Tennessee school child learns early on that our state has been blessed with heroes throughout its history. Davy Crockett at the Alamo, Alvin York in the trenches of World War I Europe – we continue to revere the honorable people who sprang from our hills and hollows with the in-borne courage to do the next right thing when they were called on to do so. There are three other heroes – two long-gone now and one who is still very much alive – who helped expand our franchise and, in the process, helped save our democracy. The two deceased heroes were Harry Burn and Ben West. The third hero, the one who still walks among us, is Senator Tim Burchett of Knoxville.

Harry Burn was a first-term Republican state representative from McMinn county, the youngest Tennessee state legislator serving in 1920 when women's suffrage hung in the balance in our state. Back then, only one more state was needed to ratify the Nineteenth amendment to the US Constitution, an amendment that would give women the right to vote. Like many legislators at the time, Representative Burn was under extreme pressure from sexist politicians back home to oppose the amendment, to keep women "in their place". Some even believed that Rep. Burn was a safe bet to vote against suffrage, since he wore a red rose on his lapel, a color then (and now) that represented exclusion and disenfranchisement. But as the pivotal vote approached, the opponents of inclusion did not know that Representative Burn carried in his coat pocket a letter from his widowed mother urging him to vote for ratification. When his name was called, Harry Burn voted "yes", the single deciding vote that ratified – for our entire nation – the Nineteenth Amendment.

Ben West was the Mayor of Nashville in 1960, when Black college students began a series of lunch-counter sit-ins in segregated department stores that were among the many pillars of the Jim Crow South. For months, those students had been arrested and hauled off to jail. As a result, the Black community had boycotted Nashville stores and Whites had also stayed away, crippling the downtown Nashville economy. Tensions had risen to the point where the home and church of Reverend Alexander Looby, a civil rights leader, had been bombed, sending him to the hospital. Responding to that violence, thousands of Nashvillians marched to City Hall where Mayor West met them. One young Fisk student, Diane Nash, spoke quietly that day to Mayor West and pleaded with him to use the prestige of his office to end racial segregation at the lunch-counters. Mayor West's response was simple and direct: "Yes, young lady, I will do that." Years later, Ben West said that, at that moment, he had said the only thing that any moral person could say – that he had answered as a God-fearing man, and not as a politician. The next day, the Nashville Banner's headline said it all "INTEGRATE COUNTERS – MAYOR". Within a month, all Nashville lunch-counters were integrated and, with that positive role-model in the heart of the South, Jim Crow's racist days were numbered.

That brings us to Senator Tim Burchett, a Knoxville Republican and the bravest and most patriotic man I know in our fair state today. For the past three years, Tennessee voters have been working hard to correct a serious error in how we conduct our elections here. In 2006, Tennessee wasted over $30 million in federal funds to purchase touch-screen voting machines (also called Direct Record Electronic machines, or DREs), voting machines that are slow, expensive and – worst of all – incapable of being audited or recounted. These machines have been implicated in a plethora of election fraud incidents across our country, and state after state has made the decision to ban these machines in favor of paper ballots. Tennessee was one of those states when we passed the TN Voter Confidence Act last year on a 92-3 vote in our House and a 32-0 vote in our Senate to replace those non-verifiable machines with paper ballots by the 2010 elections.

But when the Republican Party unexpectedly took control of our state legislature in 2008, one of the first things their leaders announced was that they intended to weaken, delay or repeal the Voter Confidence Act. For the past five months, a small band of Tennessee voters has traveled daily to our legislature and has witnessed a highly partisan and divided legislature, with most Democrats in favor of implementing the Voter Confidence Act as intended and most Republicans in favor of our continuing to vote on insecure and untrustworthy DREs. Since Republicans now control our General Assembly (for the first time since Reconstruction), we knew that the prospects for protecting our franchise were in peril.

Yesterday evening, as our Senate debated long and hard about a bill to delay implementation of the Voter Confidence Act until 2012 and to gut the law's election audit provisions, it was clear that the vote would be close and split along party lines. When the final vote was cast, the tally was 16-14 to delay democracy by postponing the implementation of the Voter Confidence Act until 2012. At first, we were crest-fallen, thinking that we had lost. But then one of us remembered that it takes 17 votes in the Senate for a law to pass, and with only 16 votes, the measure had failed. When we looked up at the vote board, we could see that all Democrats had voted to keep the Voter Confidence Act on-track for 2010 (except one, who had abstained) and all Republicans had voted to delay and weaken democracy. All of them, that is, except one. Senator Tim Burchett, a man who has been steadfast and vocal in his support for free, fair and verifiable elections for the past three years; and whose singular vote last night in opposition to the rest of his party allowed democracy to prevail in our state.

Thank you, Senator Burchett. Your intelligence, courage and sense of honor and fairness are what this country was built on, and what we must have in order for this nation to survive. Like Atticus Finch in "To Kill A Mockingbird", your singular bravery has helped keep us free. And like the Black citizens who filled the courtroom gallery in that long-ago movie, I will, from this day forward, stand up when you enter a room. Because I will know that I am in the presence of a modern-day patriot, the latest in a long line of American heroes who sprang from the hills of our Tennessee when they were needed to help keep our nation strong and safe -- and free. Yesterday, you saved our democracy.

Bernie Ellis, Organizer
Gathering To Save Our Democracy

---

If any of you want to thank Senator Burchett yourself, here is his email address: sen.tim.burchett@capitol.tn.gov . Please bcc me on your messages -- my email address is tracevu@bellsouth.net . Thanks kindly, all y'all.



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indepat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-19-09 10:02 AM
Response to Original message
1. Kudos for Senator Burchett: this vote suggests the number of TN state senators who vote in the
public interest can be counted on the thumbs of one hand. :P
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Fly by night Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-19-09 10:15 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. You're right. And I'd like to cram the other thumb up the ass ...
... of the single Democratic Senator who abstained in the pivotal vote. What a putz.

I just sent this tribute directly to Senator Burchett. Now it's time to send it to the Knoxville papers.
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predfan Donating Member (769 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-19-09 10:48 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. Who was the abstention?
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Fly by night Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-19-09 10:59 AM
Response to Reply #3
5. Senator Joe Haynes, one of our original sponsors.
Can't figure how why both Haynes and our House sponsor (Gary Moore) did not lead the fight to preserve the Voter Confidence Act. In the case of Rep. Moore, his willingness to delay the law and to gut the audit procedures were an embarrassment to him (and a source of real anger for us.)
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indepat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-19-09 03:37 PM
Response to Reply #2
11. And additionally, a follow-up rocket shot up the ass of that Democratic Senator would seem
fitting. :D
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Kalyke Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-19-09 10:51 AM
Response to Original message
4. Tim's been a friend of mine for years. A real sweetie.
I've sat with him at weddings and Christenings and his dad was my dean at UT.

He's pretty cool... for a Republican.
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OnTheOtherHand Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-19-09 11:23 AM
Response to Original message
6. K&R n/t
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Fly by night Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-19-09 03:06 PM
Response to Reply #6
9. Thanks -- it is nice to have evidence that election integrity is a nonpartisan issue, ...
... even if only one Republican makes that point.

I do hope Senator Burchett's R colleagues are having a crisis of conscience this morning. We'll see ....
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Uncle Joe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-19-09 12:02 PM
Response to Original message
7. Kudos to Senator Tim Burchett for actually representing the citizens of Tennessee
as opposed to Party Political advantage and or self-serving interest.:patriot:

Thanks for the thread, Fly by Night.:thumbsup:
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Fly by night Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-19-09 01:47 PM
Response to Reply #7
8. An excerpt of this tribute has just been published on the Knoxville News blog.
Hopefully, they will publish the longer version in their print edition.

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Fly by night Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-19-09 03:18 PM
Response to Original message
10. In addition to the nice words for Senator Burchett, I had this to say about ...
... our election theft-enabling State Election Coordinator, Mark Goins:

"If Mark Goins weren't so full of shit, he'd be an empty suit."

Here's what I really feel about Mr. Goins, someone who received his undergraduate and law school degree from Pat Roberttson's Regents University, where they train students to infiltrate our governments and sabotage them from within. (This was posted on the Knoxville News Sentinel blog last night):

"Mark has been providing misleading information from the get-go and he has not stopped yet. Instead of costing counties more money to implement the Voter Confidence Act, it will actually save our counties $10-$14 million per year. That is because we can reduce by 70% the number of voting machines we need to run our elections -- machines that the voting machine companies charge handsome fees for maintenance, programming, software licensing, etc.

"Besides saving money, switching to paper ballots (counted by opscan) allows voters to vote 10-15 times faster than on the unverifiable touch-screen machines. And the bottom line is that we start and end with paper ballots that can (and will) be recounted to insure that the opscans are doing their jobs properly and that the "consent of the governed" is measured accurately.

"Mark Goins was put in his position for one purpose -- to keep our elections unsafe and unverifiable in Tennessee. He will do and say anything to accomplish that.

"Regardless of whether someone's political leanings differ from mine, I will fight for any American's right to vote as they see fit and to have their votes counted exactly as they were cast. That is what has kept our country safe and strong for over 200 years -- government of, by and for the people. Anyone (or any political party) who wants to tamper with the safety and security of our elections has no place in our government. Really, they have no place in our politics.

"Thanks for continuing to cover this story. If your readers will email me (tracevu@bellsouth.net), I will send them several handouts that document the misinformation campaign that is attempting to keep our elections unsafe and tamper-prone. We need to nip this nonsense in the bud, or we need another Battle of Athens (TN) -- sooner rather than later."

Bernie Ellis, Organizer
Gathering To Save Our Democracy
-----

For those of you who've never heard about the Battle of Athens (TN), it would be worth Googling.

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