Bambi and Thumper Kick Republican Ass
By John Scott Lucas
Before I went to bed, that night, I flipped through the channels on my hotel TV set. As I hadn't watched network television in some time, the sheer number of political ads seemed staggering, both for their overall negativity, and for the alarming ratio of Bush ads to Kerry, which I estimated to be about two to one in favor of Bush. The blatant lies of the Bush ads astounded and angered me. I didn't sleep well, because I was so agitated by what I saw on TV. By daybreak, I was so exhausted that I didn't hear my alarm go off. Fortunately, I had had the foresight to ask for a 5:00 AM wake-up call, so I had just enough time to shower, shave and dress and still make it down to the Election Protection offices in time for the 5:30 volunteer muster.
By 5:45, I had my assignment, and I was matched up with two law students, Zoe, a Harvard law student, and Kate, who was studying law at U. Penn. We were a good team — they had the legal background, and I had a car. Zoe and Kate turned out to be something like the legal equivalent of "Bond Girls." Imagine "Bambi" and "Thumper" from "Diamonds are Forever," only as legal aides. Zoe's big brown eyes and Kate’s one-thousand watt smile could make you forget that they were not only whip smart, but perfectly capable of kicking your ass in a political knife fight.
As we drove to our assigned polling place, we immediately started swapping war stories. It was scary to think that the political system in America had come down to this — voter intimidation, disinformation, ballot tampering, and intentional disenfranchisement. The thought that we might be squaring off against somebody who actually had the audacity to challenge the right of American citizens to vote on the basis of race, income, or probable voting patterns, was thrilling and sickening at the same time. The atmosphere of an impending showdown informed even the most innocuous conversational gambits. Somehow we got on the subject of my years living in Los Angeles.
I gave them my standard LA spiel: "Los Angeles is not a city, it's a disaster theme park. In the eleven years I was there, I lived through three major earthquakes, six brush fires, countless mud slides, one infamous riot, and two freeway road-rage shootings."
This last little bit of braggadocio prompted Zoe to tell me about her own near-death experience. Zoe and Kate first met while interning at Brooklyn City Hall. Zoe was in the very same room when Brooklyn City Councilman James E. Davis was shot. Kate missed the gunplay by a scant few minutes because she had gone out for coffee.
After Zoe finished her story, all I could say, was, "Okay, you win. That tops any story of mine."
Up until this moment I was entertaining the fantasy that Zoe and Kate would be the brave, dedicated crusaders, and I would be the noble tough guy who watched their backs. Once I heard Zoe's story about the Davis shooting, I recast myself as the plucky sidekick who drove them around. They were both smarter and tougher than me.
The polling place to which we were assigned was located in the front parlor of the rectory of a Baptist church, one block north of Cecil B. Moore Avenue. It was the kind of church with an illuminated cross hanging over the main entrance. The polls weren't open yet, but there was already a group of people waiting outside.
As we got out of the car, a painfully thin, elderly black woman in a baseball cap came up to us and asked, "Are you from down the street? Do you have my $100?"
I had no idea what she was talking about, and neither did Zoe or Kate.
We went inside the Rectory and introduced ourselves to the Polling Supervisor, a deacon of the church, and the Clerks of Polls, most of whom were women, and all parishioners. Keisha had stressed the importance of making nice with the poll workers first thing, partly to establish a rapport in case a polling dispute arose, but mostly to secure access to the bathrooms. If we got on the wrong side of the poll workers, they could bar us from entering the polling place except for official business. In some neighborhoods, it would be a hassle to find alternate facilities.
North Philly was unknown territory to Zoe and myself; even Kate, who was attending U. Penn, had never actually been in this part of town. Since it was a black, urban neighborhood, I assumed that most of the voters leaned to the left, but I didn't know how the locals would respond to us, and the divisiveness of the campaign made me expect the worst. As it turned out, we had nothing to fear. We were deep inside friendly territory. In fact, by the end of the day, I met only two Republicans, and merely saw one other — one very pathetic, very lonely Republican. But I’ll have to tell you about him later.
The first and last two Republicans I would actually talk to that day introduced themselves to everybody at the polling place around 10:00 am. They were organizers for the RNC poll monitors. They were superficially friendly. They saw our Election Protection shirts and asked us if it was a Democratic organization. We assured them that it was non-partisan. One of them pressed the issue, asking, "Okay, that may be the official stance, but aren't most of you people Democrats?" We assured them that we were here to protect the right of all voters, regardless of their political affiliations or ours.
Just then, a jovial black man strolled up and loudly asked, "Which booths are for the REPUBLICANS?" He was adding extra emphasis. "I wanna make sure I cast my votes for the REPUBLICANS!"
There was mischief in his eyes, and I was 99% sure he was shitting me, but I didn't want to take any chances in front of the RNC, so I politely told him that he could vote for any candidate from any machine.
(To be continued)
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