home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
042594
/
0425110.000
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-05-26
|
10KB
|
187 lines
<text id=94TT0472>
<title>
Apr. 25, 1994: One Person, Seven Votes
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Apr. 25, 1994 Hope in the War against Cancer
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
LAW, Page 42
One Person, Seven Votes
</hdr>
<body>
<p>In Alabama a radical electoral system helps minorities. But
is the system fair?
</p>
<p>By David Van Biema--Reported by Wendy Cole/New York and David Rynecki/Clanton
</p>
<p> For the first six decades of Willie Gill's life, the winding
dirt road next to his house in Chilton County, Alabama, was
a nuisance. If trucks weren't churning its surface into clouds
of red dust, rains were turning it into a swamp. Gill, who is
black, never really expected the all-white county commission
to do much about it. "But Mr. Agee, he come and put in a paved
road just about last year," Gill reports. "I'm glad to have
it."
</p>
<p> Gill is no fire-breathing radical. Nor is Bobby Agee, a 43-year-old
funeral director who six years ago became the county's first
black commissioner since Reconstruction. Yet Gill's road would
not have been paved had he and other Chilton County blacks not
voted for Agee seven times apiece--legally. It was an act
that, radical or not, put them in the vanguard of a ballot-casting
experiment called cumulative voting, one of a brace of methods
hailed by some as the future of suffrage but labeled antidemocratic
by no less an authority than Bill Clinton.
</p>
<p> Traditionally Americans are uneager to tinker under the hood
of the voting machine. There is one major recent exception,
however: minority voting rights. In 1982, when it had long been
obvious that white majorities throughout the country were--legally--freezing black minorities out of any office whatsoever,
Congress revised the Voting Rights Act. Combined with related
court cases, the revision compels areas with histories of discrimination
to create voting districts where minorities can get elected.
Almost invariably this was read as a call to carve out geographic
districts where blacks, Hispanics or Native Americans were the
majority.
</p>
<p> The solution is imperfect. Some scholars object outright to
any government engineering of racial advantage. Other critics
note that whites in the newly created districts become a new
voiceless minority. A third group grimaces at the gerrymanders
spawned when districters create land bridges between geographically
dispersed minority members. Nonetheless, the districts were
generally accepted as a necessary evil. Their critics from the
right risked portrayal as troglodytes. And when Lani Guinier,
Clinton's ill-fated candidate for Assistant Attorney General
for Civil Rights, entered stage left, having penned articles
suggesting some alternatives, the backpedaling President called
them "antidemocratic" and "difficult to defend."
</p>
<p> Within weeks of her nomination's withdrawal, however, Guinier
found an unlikely ally. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor
ruled that districts like North Carolina's serpentine 12th were
"bizarre" and might be challenged as perpetuating "political
apartheid." Many voting-rights champions, facing language that
seemed to question their very enterprise, were stymied.
</p>
<p> Not so Judge Joseph H. Young of Maryland. Ruling two weeks ago
on a Voting Rights Act suit against Worcester County, Maryland,
Young bade it change--not by adding a black-majority enclave,
but by adopting one of Guinier's reviled alternatives, cumulative
voting. Meanwhile, the New York Times had published a speculative
plan drafted by the Washington-based Center for Voting and Democracy
explaining how North Carolina could erase its troublesome 12th
in favor of the same system. Suddenly one of Lani's Follies
looked like it might be the wave of the future.
</p>
<p> You can't study it in Maryland, however: Young's decision has
been appealed. You must go to Chilton County, one of three sizable
areas (the others are Alamogordo, New Mexico, and Peoria, Illinois)
where cumulative voting is established.
</p>
<p> Unlike Montgomery, 40 miles distant, Chilton has never been
an activist hotbed, perhaps because this peach-farming flatland
is only 12% African American. "The blacks pretty much blend
in with us," says Judy Smith, who owns a Sno Biz shaved-ice
stand. "Every once in a while they get rowdy, but they're not
quite as bad as they are elsewhere." Be that as it may, in 1985
a black political group called the Alabama Democratic Conference
brought a voting-rights suit against Chilton and some surrounding
municipalities. Nearby towns opted to create black-majority
districts, but Chilton's highly dispersed black population would
have necessitated a horrific gerrymander. Instead the county
undertook cumulative voting for a seven-seat county commission.
When the 1988 ballots were printed, there were seven blank spaces
next to the name of each of 14 candidates. Voters were told
they could distribute seven votes in any way they chose.
</p>
<p> Academic proponents of cumulative voting swear by such a system's
mathematical elegance. When filling seven seats, even though
blacks make up only 11% of Chilton's voters, if they "plump"
all seven of their votes for one candidate, that person should
almost inevitably be elected--without any outright governmental
action on behalf of a specific minority. Of course, the same
academics swear the system isn't confusing. Chilton County Probate
Judge Bobby Martin, who oversaw the 1992 commission elections,
differs. He says dozens of voters penciled in more than seven
votes: "There were so many mistakes, we almost ran out of ballots."
</p>
<p> And yet, when the corrected votes were tallied, the results
were a voting-rights dream. Seven people were elected. Six were
white. But the seventh was Agee, who received the highest vote
total, suggesting he got seven votes each from nearly every
black adult in the county.
</p>
<p> As the sole black candidate for the commission, Agee was a natural
magnet for multiple votes. The numerous white candidates were
not. O.J. McGriff understands. McGriff, a white man, was a 26-year
veteran of the county school board when a cumulative election
for that body knocked him off. "A lot of people thought I had
it made, so they split their votes," he says. "I've learned
a lesson. With cumulative voting, you're running against everybody--like you're a potato in a basket." The system, he claims,
is fair to minorities but not majorities, "and [white] people
don't like it. They don't like it at all."
</p>
<p> Commissioner Julius Kelley would disagree. "We needed a black
on the commission, and we got a good one," he says. Kelley can
afford to be generous. He is living proof that cumulative voting's
leg up to minorities is color blind. Like blacks, Chilton's
white Republicans were hungry political underdogs. They too
"plumped"--and reaped three commissioners' seats.
</p>
<p> It is far too early in Chilton County's career as a cumulative
testing ground for all of the system's permutations to have
expressed themselves. Its critics suggest that it will empower
not only "legitimate" minorities, but (in a seven-seat election)
any fringe dweller who can enthrall 12% of the voters--the
David Dukes as well as the Bobby Agees. Even without kooks,
they fear it will create mosaic governments paralyzed by factionalism.
Others predict that once minority members realize cumulative
systems provide an automatic "safe seat," numerous candidates
will split the vote, and the seat will disappear. Exactly that
happened last year in Centre, a small town about 100 miles away,
which also tried cumulativism: a black made the city council
in 1988, but four years later he had black competition, and
the council reverted to lily-white.
</p>
<p> Yet none of the larger experiments has followed suit. In Alamogordo,
Inez Moncada, whom a 1987 cumulative vote turned into the 24%-Hispanic
city's first Hispanic councilperson in decades, was re-elected
handily in each subsequent vote. (The cumulative arrangement
ended this year, however, and it remains to be seen whether
she will retain her seat when the system reverts.) Peoria has
had only one cumulative election, which created a black councilman.
</p>
<p> Chilton County had another election in 1992. Researchers from
the University of New Orleans who conducted exit polls report
that relations between races at the polling places were cordial
but tense. Of the white voters polled, 48% said they found the
election experience "poor," but 88% understood it well enough
to know you could cast all seven votes for the same candidate.
As for blacks, the overwhelming majority approved of cumulative
voting; 87% clumped all their votes on one candidate, and Bobby
Agee was re-elected.
</p>
<p> "When I grew up," Agee says, "anybody that was in any authority
was white. It was frustrating. We'd get a white politician that
would come in and promise everything, and then when they won,
they didn't know you." He is receiving friends at his business.
His tone is soft, almost apologetic, but his small handlebar
mustache and his pink tie and matching handkerchief suggest
a healthy self-image. Some wonder whether perhaps he is too
moderate. His response may relieve those who resent his judicially
mandated rise, not to mention its newfangled engineering. "I'm
only one person on the board," he says. "I've got to work within
the system. Sure, I could take them to court every time we disagree,
but that's not how it works best."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>