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Politics : Al Gore vs George Bush: the moderate's perspective

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To: Dan B. who wrote (7126)11/22/2000 8:39:17 AM
From: Lane3  Read Replies (1) of 10042
 
... that rules are laid out where-in
candidates have the opportunity to employ the chad engendered vote
recovery methods in counties of their choice, so long as various
county canvassing boards permit it when asked. But I maintain this
was never intended as per the law.


It may not have been explicitly intended, but it was at least an consequence that could/should have been anticipated. The law is quite clear that the responsibility for requesting recounts lies with the candidate and the decision is up to the locality. What we're dealing with here is one of the natural byproducts of decentralization--diverse approaches.

The tug between centralization and decentralization is as old as the hills and institutions tend to swing back and forth. When centralization results in so much central control and standardization that creativity suffers, we swing toward decentralization. Then, when things get too chaotic and too uneven, we call for greater centralization. This theme is one of the most salient distinctions between the Dems and the Reps. There is greater creativity and vitality in decentralization, but there is also more disparity of treatment. We pick our own poison. Don't you think it's ironic that the Reps are finding unfairness in local control?

The statewide provisions denying voter error(chads remaining
attached, etc.) and demanding only machine error and fraud as reasons
for hand-counting, served to limit such activities as we see here from
taking place.


Now this is another matter entirely from county shopping. I have not studied it closely enough to have an opinion.

I don't believe this is a matter of benefit to "my" candidate.

My experience is that most of time people say "it's unfair," what they really mean is "there's no advantage in it for me or my side." It's a totally natural thing to do and usually we don't even know we're doing it. We sit back and think how convenient it is that our principles and our interests coincide. I did not intend to suggest that your interests were driving your principles. Your arguments are, indeed, reasoned. I only meant to convey that there are a couple of objective standards for fairness, not just one.

Karen
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