WHO did you say really win that election?
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Analysis of Florida votes backs Bush
INTERRUPTED RECOUNT OF `UNDERVOTES' WAS HEADING GOP'S WAY, REVIEW SHOWS
BY MARTIN MERZER Knight Ridder
MIAMI -- President Bush's victory in Florida, which gave him the White House, almost certainly would have endured even if a manual ballot recount stopped by the U.S. Supreme Court had been allowed to go forward.
In fact, a comprehensive review of 64,248 ballots in all 67 Florida counties by the Miami Herald; Knight Ridder, the parent company of the Herald and the Mercury News; and USA Today found that the 537-vote margin of Bush, a Republican, would have increased to 1,665 votes under the counting standards advocated by supporters of Democrat Al Gore.
The newspapers' recount project was conducted by the public accounting firm BDO Seidman. It was designed to answer a question asked by many Americans and certain to be examined by historians:
What would have happened if the U.S. Supreme Court had not halted the sweeping manual recount of ``undervotes'' -- ballots without presidential votes that could be detected by the counting machines -- that was ordered by the Florida Supreme Court on Dec. 8, a month after the presidential election?
The answer under almost all scenarios: Bush still would have won.
But, in one of the great ironies of the 2000 election, Bush's lead would have vanished if the recount had been conducted under the severely restrictive standards that some Republicans advocated.
The examination of ballots also provides ammunition for Gore supporters who contend that more Floridians voted for their candidate and he should have been awarded Florida's 25 electoral votes and the White House.
A Gore victory
But for Gore to have won, two improbable things needed to have happened. First, there would have had to be a statewide manual recount of all undervotes in all counties, which wasn't what the Florida Supreme Court ordered.
Then, election authorities across the state would have had to use a very liberal standard for judging a voter's intent -- essentially counting every mark, dimple, pinprick or bit of hanging chad. The standard used most widely in recounts around the United States is tighter and would not have given Gore the election.
The Florida Supreme Court ordered a statewide manual recount, but excluded Broward, Palm Beach and Volusia counties and 139 precincts in Miami-Dade, where manual recounts already had been conducted.
This portion of the newspapers' project examined only the state's undervotes. The Herald, Knight Ridder, USA Today and several other Florida newspapers also are fully reviewing at least 110,000 ``overvotes'' -- ballots for which machines recorded votes for more than one presidential candidate. That project should be concluded within a month. Its results will not affect the conclusions of the undercount review, because the Florida Supreme Court excluded overvotes from the statewide manual recount.
Regardless of the reviews, debate is likely to continue over the outcome of last year's election, the closest in 124 years.
Imprecision always an issue
While the ballot reviews underscore how imprecise the numbers released on election night can be, election officials nationwide say the possibility of human error is so great that it is almost impossible to hold a mistake-free election. That imprecision is not an issue, they say, except when the results are extremely close.
Here's what the ballot review found in the counties that were included in the state court-ordered recount:
STANDARD: Every dimple, pinprick or bit of hanging chad on a punch-card ballot is considered a valid vote, the most generous standard.
RESULT: Bush would have won by 1,665 votes.
STANDARD: Dimples were counted as presidential votes only on ballots that had dimples in other races, suggesting a fault with either the machine or the voter's ability to use it.
RESULT: Bush would have won by 884 votes.
STANDARD: A vote was counted only when a piece of chad was detached by at least two corners, perhaps the most common standard applied nationally.
RESULT: Bush would have won by 363 votes.
STANDARD: A vote was counted only when a hole was cleanly punched, the most restrictive standard.
RESULT: Gore would have won by 3 votes.
But Gore's advantage under that standard -- 0.00005 percent of the 5.9 million votes cast by Floridians -- would have been so tiny that it still would have left the outcome in question. In addition, it is produced by a highly unlikely scenario.
Like the most generous standard, the severely restrictive clean-punch standard is rarely employed. Among two dozen states that impose standards on manual recounts of undervotes, only Indiana insists on cleanly punched chad.
Nevertheless, many Republicans have advocated that standard since the newspapers began their ballot review more than three months ago.
``The context in which we viewed this entire recount is that, the election is over, there is only one legal standard for a vote, the standard that was in place when people went in to vote, and that was a clear punch,'' Portia Palmer, a representative of the Republican Party of Florida, said recently.
The review found that the result would have been different if every canvassing board in every county had examined every undervote, a situation that no election or court authority had ordered. Gore had called for such a statewide manual recount if Bush would agree, but Bush rejected the idea and there was no mechanism in place to conduct one.
Here's what the review found in all Florida counties, including those that were not part of the court-ordered recount:
STANDARD: Every dimple, pinprick or bit of hanging chad on a punch-card ballot is considered a valid vote, the most inclusive standard.
RESULT: Gore would have won by 393 votes.
STANDARD: Dimples were counted as presidential votes only on ballots that had dimples in other races, suggesting a fault with either the machine or the voter's ability to use it.
RESULT: Gore would have won by 299 votes.
STANDARD: A vote was counted only when a piece of chad was detached by at least two corners, perhaps the most common standard applied nationally.
RESULT: Bush would have won by 351 votes.
Tuesday, both parties claimed that the review validated their positions during the protracted election dispute.
At the White House, press secretary Ari Fleischer said: ``The president believes, just as the American people do, that this election was settled months ago. The voters spoke, and George W. Bush won.''
Bob Poe, chair of Florida's Democratic Party, said the review shows that many official tallies were incomplete and inaccurate.
``My feeling is still that more people went to the polls to vote for Al Gore than went to vote for George W. Bush, and that some really bad things happened,'' Poe said. ``This tells us that the system has some major flaws that need to be improved.''
Doug Hattaway, a former Gore campaign official, said: ``If you count every vote, Gore wins. This study confirms that Florida's election system failed the voters.''
Florida law says no ballot may be discarded if the intent of the voter is clear. But the law is less clear on the obligations of canvassing boards to examine discarded ballots to determine whether the intent of voters can be ascertained.
Examining for voter intent
The Florida Supreme Court ruled in 1998 that canvassing boards must examine ``damaged or defective'' ballots for voter intent and further defined the term ``defective ballot'' as ``a ballot which is marked in a manner such that it cannot be read by a scanner.''
Five weeks ago, the newspapers reported that if Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris had allowed South Florida counties to complete manual recounts before certifying the election, Bush probably would have won the presidency outright -- ending the dispute before the Florida Supreme Court ordered the statewide recount of undervotes.
And last month, the Palm Beach Post reported that 5,062 residents of Palm Beach County voted for three or more candidates for president.
This review did not attempt to inspect overvotes. Florida's Supreme Court order called only for the manual recounting of undervote ballots, leaving the estimated 110,000 overvotes unaffected.
But the Miami Herald-Knight Ridder-USA Today reviewers saw numerous overvotes, and it became clear that many could have been declared valid votes -- if they had been examined in time.
For instance, in some counties that use optical-scanning equipment, people managed to vote for Gore and then again for his running mate, Joseph Lieberman, or for Bush and then again for his running mate, Dick Cheney.
Throughout the state, many people voted for Bush or Gore -- then did so again in the write-in category.
All such votes were rejected by machines as overvotes. However, many elections supervisors agree that some of those votes could have been rehabilitated through manual recounts.
``It's sad,'' said Levy County Elections Supervisor Connie Asbell. ``These are people who really wanted to vote for president.''
For more on the Miami Herald's coverage, see www.miami.com/election. |