This is the second installment of a special series exploring The Forward’s election coverage throughout its 123-year history. Click here to read it in a browser and share on social media, and find our first installment here. With President Trump repeatedly challenging the integrity of the 2020 balloting during his first debate with Vice President Joe Biden this week — claims that experts largely consider baseless — it’s clear that voter access and voter fraud will remain major themes of the campaign through the election. And while the pandemic raises unique questions about our electoral systems, the Forward has been considering these issues for generations. We’ve mined our archives to help put the current discussion into historical context. After spending the summer sowing disinformation about the security of mail-in voting and generally undermining public trust in the country's electoral systems, Trump this week urged his supporters to monitor polling places, immediately raising concerns about voter intimidation. In the history of American politics, such concerns are hardly new — in fact, they were on the minds of Forward editors as far back as 1908. In those days, voters on the Lower East Side would crowd into unlikely locations to cast their votes: saloons. Election Day could be a menacing experience in such already-rowdy environments. Bruisers sent by party bosses would try to pressure voters, many of them immigrants who spoke little English, into checking the box for their candidates. It was the heyday of Tammany Hall, the often-corrupt political association that for decades ran New York's Democratic Party machine, and the rules were clear: You voted Tammany, or you faced the consequences. "Don’t let them scare you! Remember every thief, every murderer, every brute frightens their victim that way," the Forward during that election, encouraging readers to vote the Socialist Party line. "Be mindful it’s only dangerous when the detestable Tammany gangsters are out in their full villainous force. When their calumny is slightly less empowered, they won’t be able to do more harm, but rather, less." In other words: Stand strong and vote against them, and they'll lose the power to bully you. The sample ballot below, which ran Nov. 3, 1908, gave voters the clearest possible instructions on how to check the box for the Socialist Eugene V. Debs. The headline is blunt: "This is how you ought to vote today!" |