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Election Fraud and the Myths of American Democracy

  • Autores: Andrew Gumbel
  • Localización: Social research: An international quarterly of the social sciences, ISSN 0037-783X, Nº. 4, 2008 (Ejemplar dedicado a: Fraud), págs. 1109-1134
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • Ever since the great Florida meltdown in the presidential election of 2000, Americans have had reason to suspect they may not, after all, live in the greatest democracy on the planet. We have seen breakdowns at every level of the system, from voter registration to voting machine software to provisional balloting to dubious purges of supposedly ineligible voters. Despite the lip service paid to the genius of the American system, the reality is that elections in this country have rarely been about transparency and fair play; they are not about who deserves to win so much as how much each side is prepared to do to push and scrape its way over the finish line. The United States has a history of electoral malfeasance and fraud unrivalled in the rest of the western world -- a result of the unique circumstances of its democratic deve;lopment. Its claims to democratic greatness are themselves fraudulent, and now subject to closer scrutiny than ever before


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