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Voter Problems Widespread on Nov. 2nd

By AALDEF
Posted on November 4, 2004 11:23 PM

A heavy turnout of Asian American voters in today's Presidential election, especially among new citizen and first-time voters, was marred by complaints about racist poll workers, improper demands for identification, and a shortage of Asian-language interpreters at polling sites throughout New York and New Jersey.

The Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund, which dispatched over 600 volunteer attorneys, students and community workers to over 175 poll sites in 8 states, reported that Asian American voters throughout the country faced obstacles in exercising their right to vote, including:

Racist Remarks to Asian American Voters


Misdirection to Wrong Polling Sites
Improper Requests for ID
Voters Not Given Provisional Ballots

Insufficient Bilingual Poll Workers and Interpreters

AALDEF staff attorney Glenn Magpantay reported that Asian American voters faced long lines at polling places in Boston's Chinatown (at Franklyn Institute, over 1-1/2 hours' waiting time outside the polling place), Philadelphia's Chinatown (over 1 hour) and Ann Arbor, Michigan (over 45 minutes).

AALDEF also conducted multilingual exit polls of Asian American voters at polling sites in 8 states (New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Illinois, Michigan). In the 2000 Presidential Election, AALDEF surveyed over 5,000 Asian New Yorkers about their voter preferences and problems they experienced at the polls. Preliminary results from AALDEF's 2004 exit polls will be released on Thursday, documenting how Asian Americans voted in the Presidential election and what issues mattered the most to them.

For information about these activities, please email us at info@aaldef.org or call the AALDEF office at 212-966-5932.