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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: voyagers_stocktips who wrote (65042)11/8/2000 11:03:59 PM
From: greenspirit  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Gore Gains Ground in Florida Recount
Wednesday, November 8, 2000
By John P. Martin
foxnews.com
WASHINGTON — With 27 of 67 Florida counties completing their recounts, Al Gore has cut into George W. Bush's lead by 198 votes late Wednesday, reducing the margin to just over 1,500 votes in the crucial state tally that will determine the nation's 43rd president.

Meanwhile in heavily Democratic Palm Beach County, where there have been accusations that the presidential portion of the ballot was confusing, officials announced 19,120 ballots in the presidential race were nullified because more than one candidate was picked. Only 3,783 voters made that mistake on the U.S Senate portion of the ballot.

"That total is a high number," said Palm Beach County Commissioner Carol Roberts, who is part of the canvassing board that is conducting the recount.

Pinellas County will have to redo its recount Thursday after a poll worker inadvertently failed to run an unknown number of ballots through its computer Wednesday, county Supervisor of Elections Deborah Clark said. The county retracted its original announcement that Gore had gained 404 votes and Bush dropped by 61 in its recount.

Both candidates dispatched aides to Florida to oversee the historic ballot recount that could conclude by 5 p.m. Thursday.

But Democrats were also threatening a lawsuit to halt the process because they said Republicans in Florida were ignoring claims of possible voter fraud and trying to rush the recount. State officials pledged to be fair.

"The state of Florida is in the national spotlight right now, in the world spotlight," Florida Attorney General Bob Butterworth said.

Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, brother of the Republican nominee, recused himself from the election canvass commission that will certify the winner and determine who gets the state's critical 25 electoral votes.

Like many others, the Florida governor struggled to find enough adjectives to describe the previous 24 hours, when the results swung back and forth and ended with his brother clinging to a lead of 1,700 votes out of 5.9 million ballots cast. The slim margin prompted the recount.

"All along we thought it would be close," said Jeb Bush, who admitted he called and apologized to his brother for failing to deliver the state. "Never in my wildest dreams did I ever imagine it would be this close."

In Austin, George W. Bush appeared briefly with running mate Dick Cheney outside the governor's mansion, and announced former Secretary of State James Baker would represent him in Florida. Both Bush and Cheney said they were confident their margin will stand and carry them to the White House.

Bush, the two-term governor who is hoping to beat the Democrats who ousted his father from the White House eight years ago, called the night "an exciting election" that displayed "the strength of our American democracy."

Gore told reporters in Nashville that it's "crucial that the American people have full faith" in the process, and promised that, regardless of the result, any transition will occur with dignity and "respect for the will of the people."

He enlisted former Secretary of State Warren Christopher to supervise the recount for him and running mate Joseph Lieberman. Christopher was careful to note, "We're not on the edge of a constitutional crisis" but cautioned that the process must be careful and fair.

Gore Voters For Buchanan, Not Nader

In Palm Beach County, some Democratic voters complained that a confusing ballot prompted them to vote inadvertently for Reform Party candidate Pat Buchanan. Buchanan received 3,000 votes in the county — an unusually high number compared to the rest of the state and district expectations. And questions swirled in other districts about voters who were turned away at the polls.

Also unclear is the impact of overseas absentee ballots, which under Florida law can be accepted for up to 10 days after Election Day.

Media Mess

Dangling in the balance is the outcome of an unusually close election that defied expectations, mirrored a country evenly divided, and raised anew questions about how and when the media declares winners.

The electoral vote seesawed through much of Tuesday night, forced news networks to twice rescind their projections, and ended with Gore calling Bush shortly before 4 a.m. Wednesday to retract an earlier concession.

State of Affairs

By then, only Florida and Oregon remained undecided, but the results elsewhere were unlike any other in a generation. Bush and Cheney won 30 states, blanketing most of the South and the nation's breadbasket. They won in Tennessee and Arkansas, home states of Gore and President Clinton. But Gore and Lieberman captured 19 states and the District of Columbia, including must-win battlegrounds of Michigan, Iowa and Washington.

Fittingly, even the bellwether states, those with a history of picking presidential winners over the last half-century, failed to cooperate: Pennsylvania fell to Gore, while Missouri chose Bush.

When the dust settled at dawn, Gore was poised to become the first candidate in 112 years to win the popular vote but not the 270 electoral votes necessary for the presidency. The latest tallies gave him 48,854,158 votes nationwide, about 49 percent of the total and about 215,000 more than Bush's 48,641,710.

The split reverberated in the Congress, where Republicans were waiting Wednesday to see the results of a Washington state race that could enable them to keep a slim Senate majority. Their edge in the House was safer, with the GOP holding a 220-211 edge with two races still undecided.

And the second-guessing began. Should Bush have spent millions of advertising dollars and time in California, a state in which he never significantly challenged Gore? Was the vice president wise to relegate President Clinton, a master campaigner, to the sidelines? Did Green Party nominee Ralph Nader, who failed to reach his national goal of 5 percent, but earned 95,000 votes in Florida, tip the election to Bush? Did the media taint the race by reporting Florida returns before polls closed in the state's western panhandle — which rests just across the central time zone boundary?

One sideline commentator was Clinton, who spoke to Gore early Tuesday night after first lady Hillary Clinton clinched her own Senate victory but before the presidential roller coaster began.

"I was just like you last night," Clinton told reporters. "I was a fascinated observer."



To: voyagers_stocktips who wrote (65042)11/8/2000 11:23:33 PM
From: greenspirit  Respond to of 769667
 
voyager, you want to see a crazy scenario that is still possible! Check this one out....

Absentees may push Bush to victory in Florida, but new tallies possible in Iowa, Wisconsin, New Hampshire

By Tom Curry
MSNBC

NEW YORK, Nov. 8 — All eyes may be on the recount in Florida, but even if Democrat Al Gore were to prevail there, his bid for the presidency would not be absolutely secure if his wafer-thin victories in Iowa and Wisconsin were also put to a recount.

IN IOWA, with 99 percent of voting precincts reporting as of noon Wednesday, Gore had only a 5,253-vote lead over Republican George W. Bush out of nearly 1.3 million votes cast, while in Wisconsin, with all precincts reporting, Gore had a lead of 5,921 out of more than 2.5 million votes cast.

ANOTHER RECOUNT SCENARIO
If Gore were to win Florida but then have his victories in Iowa and Wisconsin reversed after the votes in those two states were recounted, he would have only 267 electoral votes — three short of the 270 he needs to win the electoral vote.

In that case, Gore would need Oregon’s seven electoral votes to push him to victory. Bush has a small lead in Oregon, but an estimated 350,000 votes have yet to be counted in that state.

Kevin Kennedy, executive director of the Wisconsin Election Board, said if the losing candidate sought to challenge the results, he would need to do so no later than three business days after the state had received official results from all 72 of the state’s counties, which would probably be next Wednesday. So challenges would need to be filed by Nov. 20.

If there were a recount, each county’s board of canvassers would conduct it. The candidate challenging the results could present evidence to each county’s board of any allegedly improper ballots. The county boards’ decisions would be subject to appeal in state court.

Even before Election Day, a controversy erupted in Wisconsin over allegations that homeless people in Milwaukee had been paid in cigarettes to vote for Gore.

Constance Milstein, a longtime donor to Democratic candidates, went to Milwaukee homeless shelters last weekend to recruit voters. Men from one homeless mission told a local television station that they had been offered packs of cigarettes after they cast absentee ballots - but they said they weren’t told for whom to vote.

A recount might also be possible in New Hampshire, where Bush has only a 7,282-vote edge out of more than 563,00 votes cast. The Granite State has four electoral votes. If Bush were to win Florida’s 25 electoral votes but lose New Hampshire’s four, he then would have only 267 electoral votes — three short of the 270 he needs.

In that scenario, again the outcome would hinge on the final count in Oregon. Florida, though, remains the biggest state whose votes are still in limbo.

The Voter News Service — the vote-counting consortium formed by the major television networks and The Associated Press — showed Bush at noon Eastern time Wednesday with a 1,784-vote edge over Gore in the Sunshine State.

COUNTIES WILL COUNT
In Florida, the recount is the responsibility of each county’s election officials. Election supervisors in the state’s 67 counties were ordered to start the recount as soon as possible Wednesday. With the vote difference at less than 0.5 percent, an automatic recount was triggered under state law.

“They’ve been up all night, so they might not get to work right at 8 a.m.,” said Clay Roberts, director of the state Division of Elections. “We think it’s important that the people of Florida have an answer as quickly as possible. But also we think it’s important that we do this right.”

In each county, a three-member canvassing board made up of a county judge, the chairman of the county commission and the local elections supervisor, recounts the votes. The makeup of the canvassing board is supposed to insulate the process from politics, Roberts said.

In Tallahassee, the state capital, the results would be certified by Gov. Jeb Bush, brother of the GOP nominee, Republican Secretary of State Katherine Harris and Roberts, also a Republican appointee.

Representatives of both national parties were headed to the state. The Gore campaign said former Secretary of State Warren Christopher was in charge of its effort. Bush said former Secretary of State James Baker will represent his camp.

Senior Democratic officials also said a team of three lawyers, including Democratic Party counsel Joe Sandler, was on the way to Florida to observe the final canvass.

Another potentially crucial issue in Florida is the number of absentee ballots cast by Floridians living overseas. In 1996 there were approximately 2,500 such absentee ballots, many of them from military personnel.

As of Wednesday morning, it was not known how many absentee ballots may come in from Floridians living overseas.

But NBC News Elections Director Sheldon Gawiser says many of the overseas absentee ballots will likely be from military personnel, who would tend to support Bush.

Ed Offley, editor in chief of Stars and Stripes, a leading newspaper covering the U.S. military, told Reuters that “military people tend to vote Republican by about eight or nine to one.”

The overseas absentee ballots had to be postmarked by Nov. 7, but they have until Nov. 17 to arrive at local election offices in Florida.

In 1996, of the 2,300 overseas absentee ballots that were returned in Florida, 54 percent were cast for Republican presidential candidate Bob Dole, in a state that was carried by President Bill Clinton.