The Backstory of the Vermont Election

One of the important things that happened during this recent campaign season was the censoring by the Press of non democratic/republican candidates. This has been a nation-wide problem for a long time. The ‘Naderization’ of candidates is a growing threat to the electoral process.

Nowhere in the country has the problem with the Press been more serious than in the southern half of Vermont. Letters of support of non major Party candidates were not published. Campaign statements were not published. There was total news blackout in most of southern Vermont. Voters had almost no access to relevant candidate information.

This news blackout was so extreme that newspapers in the southern part of Vermont even refused to insert the Candidate Information Publication. This official, non-partisan publication had been authorized by the Vermont Legislature (17 V.S.A. 2810 b) and paid for by the taxpayers. As a contrast, newspapers in the central and northern parts of Vermont such as The Burlington Free Press, The Newport Daily News, The Rutland Herald, and The Times Argus inserted and distributed the publication. Those newspapers are to be commended for their public service.

The Office of Secretary of State is to be commended for sending more than a thousand copies of the publication to a private citizen in the southern part of the State. As a last resort, the citizen had volunteered to distribute the publication – a much less efficient system of distribution than insertion in the daily newspaper.

It is now necessary for the legislature to rewrite the law so that southern Vermont will have access to relevant information. Two amendments to the law (17 V.S.A. 2810b ) are recommended. First, set a publication date for the Candidate Information Publication that would precede the first day allowed for absentee voting. Becoming an informed voter after casting the ballot is not the proper sequence of events. Second, the law must provide for a plan of distribution in the southern part of the State.

In Vermont, and across the country, many have no access to the Internet. Some areas are not in a major media market; therefore, TV news is non existent. The newspaper is the only source of information – the lifeline of the community. It is that which transforms individuals into a community. In rural USA there is no voice that is more powerful than that of the local newspaper. When any newspaper fails in its sacred mission, the community is harmed.

The Vermont news blackout has had serious consequences. Not only were ordinary voters uninformed, but even campaign workers – usually a well-informed group of activists – were so lacking in information that it inspired an article, ‘Clueless at Campaign Headquarters’. It is published on this site. The article describes a phone call received from campaign headquarters in southern Vermont. The worker was not aware that there were any candidates on the ballot other than McCain and Obama. In Vermont there were eight candidates for president on the ballot. Many Vermonters were unprepared to see so many names on the ballot when they entered the voting booth.

Private companies that own newspapers have editorial rights. That right should be respected. Every newspaper has the right to print, or not print, anything it wants. That is not the issue. The issue is the lack of journalistic ethics. Ethics are not required by law – or are they? If any individual interfered with the electoral process in such an extreme way that it influenced the outcome of an election, would it be acceptable?

What occurred in Vermont was an extreme violation that resulted in many ripple effects on the outcome of the election. One such effect was that the Liberty Union/Socialist Party lost Major Party Status and all of the legal rights that accompany that status.

There can be no democracy where there is not a free-flow of political information.

Rosemarie Jackowski is an advocacy journalist living in Vermont. Read other articles by Rosemarie.

12 comments on this article so far ...

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  1. Hue Longer said on November 30th, 2008 at 6:10am #

    Hello Rosemarie,

    The greatest trick these guys pull is getting folks to believe that as they’re acting in the interests of the incestous power configuration they belong to, that they are somehow being “liberal”. It’s to the point where so called liberals defend them from accusations from the right. Where do folks buying into this think their opinions are being formulated if not the media?

    How often have you been accused of being a ditto head for bringing up scoundrels who served under Clinton?

    Anyways, Thanks for your fight and good luck pissing them off if you can’t get them to think

  2. rosemarie jackowski said on November 30th, 2008 at 9:50am #

    Thanks, Hue…Your last sentence there is a classic. It has warmed my heart and made my day.
    Most of the criticism I get is that it is people like us who are responsible for the wars and the killing because we don’t vote for Dems. There must be some magic formula to break through that kind of denial. I have not yet found the formula. I guess I will just have to keep “pissing them off”’.

  3. Don Hawkins said on November 30th, 2008 at 10:04am #

    That’s the spirit but we have to do a little more than “pissing them off”’. We need to get most of the people on the same page truth and knowledge working together or this may not work out well. Time is now very important.

  4. rosemarie jackowski said on November 30th, 2008 at 11:16am #

    Don…I agree. How do we get them on the same page?
    Time IS very important. Maybe, it is already too late. Maybe all of this rhetoric is just like treading water, when we all know that we are drowning and there is no hope.

  5. Don Hawkins said on November 30th, 2008 at 12:06pm #

    Nothing to it, right. The people who stand to lose the most money make the most money. They will not get on board on there own.

    A carbon cap that slows emissions of CO2 does not help, because of the long lifetime of
    atmospheric CO2. In fact, the cap exacerbates the problem if it allows coal emissions to
    continue. The only solution is to target a (large) portion of the fossil fuel reserves to be left
    in the ground or used in a way such that the CO2 can be captured and safely sequestered.

    Tax and 100% dividend. A “carbon tax with 100 percent dividend” is required for
    reversing the growth of atmospheric CO2. The tax, applied to oil, gas and coal at the mine or
    port of entry, is the fairest and most effective way to reduce emissions and transition to the
    post fossil fuel era. It would assure that unconventional fossil fuels, such as tar shale and tar
    sands, stay in the ground, unless an economic method of capturing the CO2 is developed.

    Beware of alternative approaches, such as ‘percent emission reduction goals’ and ‘cap
    and trade’. These are subterfuges designed to allow business-as-usual to continue, under a
    pretense of action, a greenwashing. Hordes of lobbyists will argue for these approaches,
    which assure their continued employment. The ineffectiveness of ‘goals’ and ‘caps’ is made
    blatantly obvious by the fact that the countries promoting them are planning to build more
    coal-fired power plants. Hansen.

    I am already reading many who say cap and trade may not get passed not because it will not work but because the people who stand to lose the most money make the most money. So the plan that Hansen has using math that helped unlock many of the Universes secrets and not the math used on Wall Street what chance does that have and of course they will yell socialism. Of course what we have seen the last few months is socialism for the people who make the most money. There is probably only one way and that is organize and make your voice heard. Easy to say hard to do. Some money is needed nonviolence is key it will not work any other way. Where to start well DV looks like a good place who is the best organizer or who has done it before. The point of course is to tell the policy makers you know and the time is now. Think Frank

  6. Don Hawkins said on November 30th, 2008 at 12:29pm #

    Among scientists they like to keep there discovery’s to themselves secret so somebody will not figure it out first and they win the prize. That thinking needs to change as the prize this time is the survival of the human race civilization at first. To me that is a big part of think frank the prize has changed.

  7. Don Hawkins said on November 30th, 2008 at 1:17pm #

    Obama can get people working together. Research is a big part of slowing climate change. In some way’s a total focus for scientists. In order to go after this problem a Herculean effort is needed. The system as we know it will not work needs to change. So far with Obama not Hercules but Mickey Mouse. Hansen said Obama needs to know the truth the whole truth. What, he doesn’t know the whole truth I find that very hard to BELIEVE.

  8. Brian said on November 30th, 2008 at 1:19pm #

    This happened in Wisconsin, too, where I live. Right here, in liberal Madison.

  9. Deadbeat said on November 30th, 2008 at 1:57pm #

    Rosemarie Jackowski writes…

    Private companies that own newspapers have editorial rights. That right should be respected. Every newspaper has the right to print, or not print, anything it wants. That is not the issue. The issue is the lack of journalistic ethics. Ethics are not required by law – or are they? If any individual interfered with the electoral process in such an extreme way that it influenced the outcome of an election, would it be acceptable?

    The aforementioned by Ms. Jackowski is contradictory. How can there be journalistic ethics with newspapers privately owned by oligarchs? Trying to get the oligarchs to go against their interest seem futile to me. It is going to take time for people to adjust to different and alternative sources of information.

    The youth seem to do that during the Obama campaign through the use of the Internet and their cell phones. The Left has to become more savvy at using new and creative outlets.

  10. rosemarie jackowski said on November 30th, 2008 at 2:10pm #

    Deadbeat… You assume that ethics would be contrary to the interest of privately owned companies. I do not agree.
    You also imply that the Internet and cell phones are available to all. That is not true. In addition, there is substantial evidence that a cell phone/coltan is not a good alternative. ALSO, at the recent Congressional hearings on cell phones and cancer, testimony was convincing that there is a FIVE HUNDRED per cent increased risk of cancer in children who had used cell phones.
    The bottom line is this – there is no substitute for the local newspaper in most rural communities. Maybe someday, but we are not there yet.

  11. Deadbeat said on November 30th, 2008 at 5:52pm #

    Ms. Jackowski writes…

    Deadbeat… You assume that ethics would be contrary to the interest of privately owned companies. I do not agree.

    Journalistic ethics has always been a problem with privately owned companies. You can go back and see cartoons from the early part of the 20th century that has the newspaper editor dress as a bride getting married to the advertisers dressed as a groom. I’m not assuming that ethic and private ownership is contradictory and stating unequivocally that they are.

    Also I am not implying that the Internet is availible to all although many public libraries has Internet access. I have a homeless friend who is quite capable of sending email this way. What I am saying is that the Left cannot count on the oligarch domination of the newspaper and TV industry to get its message across. They are going to have to find other means.

  12. rosemarie jackowski said on December 1st, 2008 at 12:19pm #

    Deadbeat… Basically I agree with what you say. The problem is that at the present time there is no alternative to the local newspaper. Maybe there should be community owned papers but how would they be financed? I have been trying to interest anyone and everyone to start such a small local paper. I cannot overcome the financing hurdle.