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Commission email for Raemi Eagle-Glenn

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Subject:
From:
Gabriel Hillel <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Commission email for Raemi Eagle-Glenn <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 4 Nov 2022 05:58:23 -0400
Content-Type:
multipart/mixed
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*Day 116: Florida Freedom Summer of 2024:  There but for fortunate, go you
or I….*

COVID-19 should have --but apparently did not--make us more conscious of
people we have stored (sic) out of sight or whose limited mobility prevents
them from going to the polls, or even to mailing boxes..    That issue
alone could make them a powerful voting bloc for a population which has
been disserved.

Jails on Nov. 8, 2022 will be filled with people who have not been
convicted of a crime, but who have lost the so-called right to vote, though
they may be registered because they could not afford bail.  Miranda
warnings don’t include notice of that opportunity.

Adults in hospitals including mental facilities, group homes, hospices, and
nursing homes generally will not be asked whether they are registered to
vote..  Too many veterans who will be remembered on the 11th are forgotten
on Nov. 8, 2022.

Volunteers delivering meals on wheels might not think of helping people to
cast ballots if they are registered, or to get them registered in the first
place.  Charities don’t seem to include assurance of assistance for adults
in need of help to vote.

At 87, with limited mobility, I was reminded yesterday morning that my
confidence in getting to the polls on Nov. 8, 2022, may be misplaced.  It
would have helped to have such thoughts before time for voter registration
expired, but as I am sure some of you may know our minds don’t necessarily
work that way.

Besides, we here are focused on 2024, not the mid-terms.

Indeed, with my excellent memory becoming less so each day, I wondered
whether people diagnosed with Alzheimer’s lose their right to vote faster
than their right to worship or speak out.

Hey, there are absentee ballots.  Why didn’t I think of that?  I could but
I am sure there are like-minded folks whose mobility limits even that
opportunity.  Hence, the earlier reference to mail boses.

We as usual of course are talking primarily about the poor who are more
likely than the rest of us to find themselves to be in places, including
our own homes, without timely access to the voting machines.   They may not
have car transportation.  They even may no longer be licensed to drive.

Having such strange notions, I started calling people who should know about
such things, including my Supervisor of Elections and the ombuds people who
advocate for long term care facilities for answers.   They were of limited
help.

I learned for example in my state, Florida, nursing home administrators
could ask the Supervisor to have a staffer go to the facilities to assist
in the voting.  I was not comforted to learn that in the pas , two or three
did ask for such assistance but for some reason only one has do so, this
time.  I haven’t bothered to check but I am sure there are far many more
eligible places which have never exercised that opportunity in my area
alone. See attached for Florida’s statutory provision and examples
elsewhere of court action to validate ballots which have been denied
locally.  Under that law, an individual registered voter can trigger that
opportunity for the facility by notifying in timely fashion the Office of
the Supervisor of Elections.

The issue of limited accessibility to vote does arise in the minds of our
crime fighters.  Why? In in addition to providing turkeys on Thanksgiving,
Boss Tweed types in the olden days sent out agents to round up ballots for
those unable to make it to the polls.  The helpers often assisted with the
filling out of the precious documents, even though such aid is illegal.

Orlando, FL got its first and so far only black mayor Ernie Page, when its
current Mayor Buddy Dyer, an attorney, was accused of using one of my
former clients in such illegal activities.  Dyer was out for five weeks,
until the matter was cleared up by the Florida Department of Law
Enforcement.

  (Orlando does not recognize Ernie’s accomplishment, perhaps because he
later was convicted of using his elected position as City Council member to
intimidate a contractor into providing kickbacks.)     I tell this story,
because I became a featured player in an *Orlando Weekly* account of those
events, “Dyer’s Best Shot,” when I still had some credibility, though the
writer didn’t think so.
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.orlandoweekly.com/news/dyers-best-shot-2260040__;!!KOmxaIYkRmNA0A!UErInTNMg4XZolA4HLWTOlqPynX1bFRyXZ6H5rErexjTr87mgWnIQaSkuniexJs2FcK9y-EaJDOHCl0JGUGbTvecGI4$ 

I am sure by now some of you realize that there are enough such votes out
there in these populations to affect the outcome surely of some local
races, and perhaps even some state positions.  There’s still some time for
example for Gainesville run-off candidates to gather some extra votes.
Just be careful to advise your campaign workers not to influence unduly the
prospective voters.

*Gabriel Hillel, for Freedom Summer of 2024*

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