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http://www.cbsnews.com/campaign2000results/election
http://www.literalpolitics.com/Florida/electiondebacle.htm
Florida 'recounts' make Gore winner
Special report: the US elections, Martin Kettle in Washington, Sunday
January 28 2001
The Observer
Al Gore, not George Bush, should be sitting in the
White House today as the newly elected president of the United States, two
new independent probes of the disputed Florida election contest have confirmed.
The first survey, conducted on behalf of the Washington Post, shows that Mr
Gore had a nearly three-to-one majority among 56,000 Florida voters whose
November 7 ballot papers were discounted because they contained more than
one punched hole. The second and separate survey, conducted on behalf
of the Palm Beach Post, shows that Mr Gore had a majority of 682 votes among
the discounted "dimpled" ballots in Palm Beach county.
In each case, if the newly examined votes had been
allowed to count in the November election, Mr Gore would have won Florida's
21 electoral college votes by a narrow majority and he, not Mr Bush, would
be the president. Instead, Mr Bush officially carried Florida by 537 votes
after recounts were stopped. In spite of the findings, no legal challenge
to the Florida result is possible in the light of the US supreme court's 5-4
ruling in December to hand the state to Mr Bush. But the revelations will
continue to cast a cloud, to put it mildly, over the democratic legitimacy
of Mr Bush's election.
Some 56,000 so-called "overvotes" were examined in
the Washington Post survey. All of these ballot papers were ruled to be invalid
votes on November 7 because they contained two or more punched holes in the
presidential section of the ballot. Twelve Florida counties used voting machines
where voting was by punch cards in this way, and eight of them participated
in the survey: Broward, Highlands, Hillsborough, Marion, Miami-Dade, Palm
Beach, Pasco and Pinellas. None of the ballot papers in the survey formed
part of any official count or recount.
The research shows that 45,608 of the 56,000 ballot
papers (87% of the total) contained votes for Mr Gore, compared with 17,098
containing votes for Mr Bush (33%). In 1,367 cases, voters punched every hole
except that for Mr Bush. In cases where the voters cast invalid "overvotes"
in the presidential election, but then cast valid votes in the US senate contest
lower down on the same ballot, 70% voted Democrat, Mr Gore's
party, and only 24% voted Republican. The disproportion was especially
dramatic in Palm Beach, whose butterfly ballot paper interleaved two lists
of candidates in such a way as to show Mr Gore's name second on the ballot
paper, but to require the voter to punch the third hole to record a vote
for him.
Though no absolute conclusions can be drawn from
the overvotes, the implication that many thousands more invalidated Floridians
intended to vote for Mr Gore than for Mr Bush seems hard to resist. The survey
also clearly implies that some of Florida's voting machines were inadequate
and that many voters were confused by the procedure.
In the second survey, the Palm Beach Post examined
4,513 dimpled "undervotes" - so named because no hole was punched in the ballot
paper - and which were excluded from the November and December manual recount
process. In each case, the Palm Beach county canvassing board ruled that
no vote had been cast on these ballots but Democratic or Republican observers
disputed the ruling. The ballots in the survey had been set aside for a possible
court-ordered review that never took place.
Of the disputed ballots, some 2,500 had dimples for
Mr Gore, while 1,818 had similar marks for Mr Bush. If they had been counted,
Mr Gore would have had a net gain of 682 votes. This would have been in addition
to a separate net gain of 174 votes from Palm Beach which was disallowed by
Florida's secretary of state.
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