And people wonder why race keeps coming up. It is because the people who don't want race to be an issue keep making it an issue and giving people of different races special rights and privilages over our Constitution. You need to treat all men equal then racism will finally have the chance to fade away!
From what I read, it isn't just Hispanics or heavily Hispanic areas that get to vote 6 times, it's everyone in the area. The whole "disparate impact" tomfoolery associated with the Civil Rights legislation needs to go - and quickly. Granted, this is New York, the heart of progressive ideology, but really now, why is it the fault of the voters that no Hispanic/Latino/nonWhite person has ever been elected? If the Hispanic/Latino/nonWhite population were more diligent in getting to the ballot box on election day, perhaps such shenanigans wouldn't be necessary for the nanny government to find a way for a Hispanic/Latino/nonWhite person to get elected..........
Actually the story says that of the 30,000 residents about half are Hispanic. So that does give them an advantage with 6 votes to vote for the 2 Hispanic candidates. Example. There are 13 people running and 2 are Hispanic. Those 2 can get 3 votes each from the Hispanic voters just to get one into office. While the rest of the votes will be divided amoung the other candidates.
If it were a prodominantly black or hispanic community with many white people living there and no white person had ever been elected, do you think they would vote to give extra votes to everyone so they could get a white person voted in to that office? That way all the white people could put all 6 votes on the white candidate to help him win. Is that fair?
Satchmo wrote: And you're surprised? That's been happening since we've had elections.
Look at how LBJ got into the Senate. The missing ballot box incident.
Plenty of dead people still vote.
I'm not saying it's right. We need to be ever vigilant.
No this wasn't people sneaking in votes. It was ordered by the judge to help get Hispanics into office.
Federal Judge Stephen Robinson said that violated the Voting Rights Act, and he approved a remedy suggested by village officials: a system called cumulative voting, in which residents get six votes each to apportion as they wish among the candidates.