Posts tagged: vote

Do Politicians Take the Disabled Vote Seriously?

Part I
By Javier Robles

Am I invisible?  Is the group of people that I belong too a mere mirage?  Are we as people with disabilities only good for photo ops and feel-good stories?  How can it be that we do not seem to count when counting votes.  We as a group become non-existent.  So much so that when Barack Obama won the Presidency and mentioned people with disabilities in his speech; it caused a stir with people with disabilities. Amazing! Yet, not surprising.  Why?

Here is what I think.  There are two simultaneous issues going on between politicians and people with disabilities.  The first issue, concerns a historical struggle for survival by individuals who to this day are second class citizens.  The second issue,  surrounds political strategist and their clients (politicians) who are unable or unwilling to realize the potential of this group.  Let me explain.

Historically, the “struggle” has been about housing, institutionalization, discrimination, access and more recently jobs.  While this list is not exhaustive it offers a glimpse of some major struggles. The point is that we as a group are in a constant battle with society to maintain our independence. We push for laws to de-institutionalize (Olmstead) and laws for greater Access (Americans with Disabilities Act) and we fight for every dollar.  We are in an eternal state of chaos.  Fighting so hard to be free that we forgot all about the politicians we put in office.  Not that politicians have done nothing.  There has been progress in the last 100 years for people with disabilities.  However, as a group we progressed with  small victories, and many times specific to our particular disability. Like the Randolph-Sheppard Act of 1936 which was passed to allow blind vendors access to Federal buildings.  There have been numerous registry laws state to state on Autism, spinal cord injuries, traumatic brain injuries, etc.  But at the end of the day we continue to be ignored on a global scale.  Our power is reduced to statistics which point to one thing; people with disabilities do not vote.  Therefore, their overall needs are unimportant during election time.  Or are they?

Part II Next Week

Sarah Palin: A Serious Diss-appointment for People with Disabilities

October 26, 2008 by Javier Robles

This November 4th, many of us will have an opportunity that we as people with disabilities and family members of people with disabilities cannot pass up. We have within our hands a mandate to change the face of this nation’s capitol.

Why a mandate you ask? Because we as a group cannot afford four more years of poverty and indifference from those we “supposedly” put into office. We must not tolerate the cold shoulder we received from the Bush Administration when it came to issues of housing, employment, stem cell research, and civil liberties violations. Everyone I know is poorer today than they were eight years ago and they are enraged. Enraged at the lengths to which people with disabilities are suffering at the hands of politicians too rich to feel their pain.

You may be thinking, “Sarah Palin understands my needs as a person with a disability; she has a son with Down syndrome and a nephew with autism.” However, that does not qualify her to run a country! I know many mothers of children with special needs who are more qualified than she is. The argument that she will protect our interest as a group is weak and full of holes. Let me list a few:

Mrs. Palin is new to disability culture and history, as new as her child is old. I have had a disability for 25 years but my mother does not ever claim to understand the “special needs” I have. Many mothers of children with disabilities would tell Mrs. Palin, “You haven’t seen anything yet.”

How do I know? Because I have heard from parents of schoolchildren who are teased until they cry about their “special needs.” Because they have asked me, “If she is so talented why won’t anyone give her a job?” Because I don’t know what to say to the immigrant mother of a 17-year-old autistic child who will not qualify for health care in a year.

Mrs. Palin recently proved in an interview that she is too rich to care about the average person with a disability. In an interview on Colorado News 9 on Oct. 21, she stated that she was against Amendment 51, which seeks to raise the sales tax by one cent on every $10 spent in each of the next two years.

The money would go to help the roughly 12,000 kids and adults in Colorado who currently are on a wait list to receive state services such as home nursing care and job training. They suffer from autism, Down syndrome and mental retardation.
Mrs. Palin said “that there must be an alternative to raising taxes,” in contrast to Colorado’s former First Lady, a Republican who supports the amendment. Besides never having visited Russia, she obviously has never visited a developmental center.

Last, Mrs. Palin, like many politicians before her, thinks she has a chip she can cash at our table. People with disabilities are not a commodity one cashes in every four years. They are part of America’s promise for a better future and inclusion regardless of your place on the economic ladder. Don’t be fooled into thinking this election is about an innocent little boy in Alaska. It is not! It is about those 12,000 kids in Colorado who in the estimation of “some” are not worth one cent on every $10.

Your vote. Your Choice. Your Future.

http://www.thisabled.com/

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