Summary of legal situation in Fla so far.
Suits challenge legality of Palm Beach ballot
By John Kennedy and Maya Bell Tallahassee Bureau
Published in The Orlando Sentinel on November 10, 2000
"It`s really so messy that I think it`s going to have to be a very, very strong showing to get the court to do anything to disturb the election." -- Joe Little University of Florida law professor
TALLAHASSEE -- Democratic challenges to Palm Beach County election returns appeared strong enough Thursday to further delay the outcome of the presidential race.
Legal experts throughout Florida said Thursday that the design of the county`s ballot appears to have violated state law, meaning that the courts likely will hear the merits of the five lawsuits filed against the elections office.
"You have a ballot which arguably did not comply with the law," said Terence Anderson, an elections law expert at the University of Miami. "But whatever you do, you`re going to have half the American voters feeling they were robbed. You have a true constitutional dilemma."
Four lawsuits in Palm Beach County on Thursday were piled on top of an existing case disputing the design of the county`s ballot. Critics say the ballot was so confusing that thousands of voters intending to cast ballots for Democrat Al Gore mistakenly voted for Reform Party candidate Pat Buchanan.
Those 3,407 votes are suspicious, plaintiffs say, because they come from predominantly Democratic condo communities that heavily favored Gore. If those votes had gone to Gore, they argue, he would have won Florida`s 25 electoral votes and the presidency.
Another 19,120 ballots were invalidated by the county because people voted for more than one presidential candidate -- lending credence, Democratic leaders say, to claims that many were confused by the ballot layout.
A 1998 Florida Supreme Court ruling involving a Volusia County sheriff`s election is the guiding legal case for the current presidential ballot struggle, which will be settled in state, not federal, courts.
But experts agree the plaintiffs could be blazing new ground.
"There simply is no precedent in Florida -- or that I am aware of, any national precedent," Anderson said.
Of the lawsuits in play, two more were filed in Tallahassee by citizens alleging racial discrimination in the balloting. Some voters claim they were unable to cast ballots after being directed to the wrong polling places.
But Palm Beach County remains the real battleground. And the elections office there, legal experts say, has a problem on its hands.
Here`s why:
Under Florida law, ballots must be designed so that candidates` names appear on the left side and the spaces or punch holes next to those names appear on the right. Also, according to the law, the ballot must list the presidential candidates in the order in which their parties collected votes in the last gubernatorial election.
The Palm Beach County ballot, though, did not follow that required format. Instead, it listed the candidates on two side-by-side pages, with all the punch holes running in a column between their names.
As a result, the punch hole meant for Buchanan appeared as the second choice on the ballot -- the place, according to plaintiffs, that should have been reserved for Gore.
Indeed, the two-page layout left many voters flummoxed with its array of punch-holes and arrows.
Republican George W. Bush did appear first on the ballot, as required by law. That`s because his brother Jeb Bush, a Republican, won the last race for governor here.
However, the second punch hole on the list was meant for Buchanan -- not Gore, as it should have been.
Jon Mills, dean of the University of Florida Law School, said the ballot does appear to be illegal. "They have stated at least a rationale question for a judge," he said of the plaintiffs.
Palm Beach County Elections Supervisor Theresa LePore said she designed the side-by-side pages so that it could be printed large enough for elderly voters to read.
The two-page ballot, which Palm Beach County officials say has been used successfully in previous elections, was reviewed by state and local Democratic and Republican Party officials prior to the election.
But Democrats on Thursday said that does not preclude the latest court challenge.
"Here in Florida, it seems very likely that many more people went to the polls thinking they were voting for Al Gore when they were not," said William Daley, Gore`s campaign strategist.
But former Secretary of State James Baker, who raced to Tallahassee to monitor the state`s ballot recount for the Bush campaign, blasted the Democratic challenges to Florida`s returns, saying they were putting the nation in jeopardy.
"The presidential election, of course, is on hold," Baker said. "And that affects the position of the United States in a number of different ways -- particularly internationally."
In the Palm Beach County lawsuits, the court likely will follow a precedent set by the state`s Supreme Court that involved a disputed 1996 Volusia County sheriff`s race.
In that case, justices set a two-part standard for voiding election results in cases in which there is no outright vote fraud. First, the court must determine whether there has been "substantial compliance" with state voting law, which Democrats in this case say there is not.
Secondly, the court must determine whether the irregularities sparking the challenge are sufficient to "adversely affect. . . the integrity of the election."
Democrats insist this standard easily applies, given Florida`s razor-thin presidential count.
In their ruling in the Volusia case, however, justices cautioned that any court should weigh heavily the decision to void an election since doing so would interfere with the rights of those who legitimately cast ballots.
"We must tread carefully on that right or we risk the unnecessary and unjustified muting of the public voice," Justice Charles Wells, a former Orlando lawyer, wrote for the court.
Indeed, in the 1997 Miami mayoral election, where thousands of ballots were thrown out because of fraud, courts stopped short of ordering a new election.
Instead, Xavier Suarez was defeated when his edge in the absentee ballot count was declared fraudulent and his opponent, incumbent Mayor Joe Carollo, became the leading vote-getter.
University of Florida law professor Joe Little said Democrats in Palm Beach County will have trouble persuading a court that a second round of balloting is needed, although few other effective remedies exist.
"It`s really so messy that I think it`s going to have to be a very, very strong showing to get the court to do anything to disturb the election," Little said.
Richard McFarlain, a former general counsel for the Florida Republican Party, agreed.
"I don`t see any fraud there," McFarlain said. "It`s just an honest mistake. Everybody is entitled to vote. But nowhere is it written that you have to vote intelligently."
Posted Nov 9 2000 11:10PM orlandosentinel.com |