That was my understanding as well. Misinformation finds ample room to run in the current political climate. Thanks for the update, and maybe check the following if you haven't already seen it.
It's been demonstrated that the media sometime get it wrong -- I call for bipartisan support, here -- but this report from the St. Petersburg Times seems to carry a decent amount of meat along with the usual gristle. I have no inkling as to the editorial politics of the newspaper, but we might as well try to get accurate information before we move on to the inevitable squabble:
For 19,000 voters, error meant ballot didn't count In Palm Beach County, voters who picked two candidates had their ballot nullified.
By ADAM C. SMITH and THOMAS C. TOBIN
© St. Petersburg Times, published November 10, 2000
--- The ballot, designed by Palm Beach's supervisor of elections, a Democrat, included the candidates' names on either side of punch holes, and many voters say they mistakenly voted for Reform Party nominee Pat Buchanan when they thought they were voting for Gore.
Whether or not the ballot is to blame, Palm Beach wound up with startling results.
Buchanan received 3,407 votes in the Democratic-leaning county, more than one in five of all the Florida votes he received. What's more, 19,120 voters voted for two or more presidential candidates and had their votes nullified.
For reasons unclear to most elections officials, voters routinely vote for too many candidates in a given race and effectively throw their vote away. Some voting systems, including Hernando County's, won't accept excessive votes in any race, but the punch cards used through much of Florida do.
"It happens all the time," said Pasco County Supervisor of Elections Kurt Browning.
Look around Florida at the number of people whose presidential votes were nullified because they voted for at least two candidates Tuesday: 3,641 voters in Hillsborough; 4,261 in Pinellas; 2,141 in Pasco; 52 in Citrus; more than 7,925 in Broward.
But 19,120 in Palm Beach?
"That's high," said Ernest Hawkins, registrar of voters in Sacramento, Calif., and president of the National Association of County Recorders, Election Officials and Clerks.
By any measure, Palm Beach's over-votes stand out.
Votes thrown out because two or more presidential holes were punched amounted to 4.14 percent of all the presidential votes cast in Palm Beach. In Broward County, only 1.3 percent were tossed for over-voting, in Pinellas just more than 1 percent, and in Hillsborough just less than 1 percent. Only the presidential vote is nullified, not the rest of the ballot.
Nobody knows how many Palm Beach voters who picked Buchanan or had their presidential ballots nullified actually supported Al Gore, but the Gore campaign claims most of them.
A St. Petersburg Times analysis of the 30 precincts with the most ballots nullified for over-voting showed 29 of them overwhelmingly supported Gore. In 21 of them, Gore won at least 80 percent of the vote.
Palm Beach voters didn't make the same mistake anywhere near as often on other races on the ballot. Elections officials tossed out 0.14 percent of the education commissioner votes, 0.13 percent of the insurance commissioner votes and 0.82 percent of the U.S. Senate votes.
"That is an incredible statistical anomaly," said Democratic Rep. Peter Deutsch of Fort Lauderdale.
Republicans have dismissed the claims of confusion, noting that the past presidential election, with a lower turnout, saw nearly 15,000 votes invalidated in the county. As about 2,500 people protesting the vote gathered at the county government center in West Palm Beach, Deutsch insisted the ballots, though reviewed in advance by both parties, were illegal on two points: The punch holes were on the wrong side, and the candidates were listed in the wrong order, with Buchanan improperly listed higher than Gore.
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