NYT: Florida law makes it clear that the purpose of a recount is to determine the intent of each voter, but it is silent on how to make that determination — how many corners of the chad, if any, have to be detached to make the vote count. Before starting its recount of nearly 600,000 votes, Broward County adopted a "two-corner rule," which the Democrats challenged in state court. At a hearing on Friday, a state circuit judge expressed doubt that the rule was valid, but did not issue a final decision.
Today, the three-member Brow ard County canvassing board unanimously reversed itself and decided to examine "the totality of each ballot," including those that are merely dimpled without any detached corners, in determining voter intent. The county filed a new brief with the Supreme Court this afternoon asking the justices to resolve the question, even in the absence of a lower court ruling, and to uphold the canvassing board's new approach. |