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Politics : Electoral College 2000 - Ahead of the Curve -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: sandintoes who wrote (1624)11/10/2000 8:52:07 PM
From: KLP  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 6710
 
Thanks...Here's what Jim Baker has to say....
Note: Bold is my doing...

James Baker: Time to Put
The Country's Interest First

Friday, November 10, 2000


Former Secretary of State James Baker, who is overseeing the Florida recount for Gov. George W. Bush, called on the Gore camp to stop challenging the voting process and act "for the good of the country."

Dave Martin/AP

James Baker: 'The campaigning should end and the business of an orderly transition should begin'


Baker addressed reporters in Florida on Friday:

JAMES BAKER: Governor George W. Bush won 31 states with a total of 271 electoral votes. The vote here in Florida was very close, but when it was counted Governor Bush was the winner.

Now, three days later, the vote in Florida has been recounted. Over two-thirds of the state election supervisors overseeing that recount are Democrats. At the end of this recount, Governor Bush is still the winner, subject only to counting the overseas ballots, which traditionally have favored the Republican candidates. No evidence of vote fraud, either in the original vote or in the recount, has been presented.

Now the Gore campaign is calling for yet another recount in selective and predominantly Democratic counties where there were large unexplained vote swings in their favor in the recount. It appears that the Gore campaign is attempting to unduly prolong the country's national presidential through endless challenges to the results of the vote here in Florida.

Furthermore, the more often ballots are recounted, especially by hand, the more likely it is that human errors, like lost ballots and other risks, will be introduced. This frustrates the very reason why we have moved from hand counting to machine counting.

Let me say a word specifically about the Palm Beach ballot. There's a rule of law to be followed in all elections. The state of Florida has established legal procedures to design, approve, publish, and if need be to protest ballots before the election. The ballot was designed by a Democratic elections supervisor. She approved it.

The Democratic Party did not question it before the election. This butterfly-type ballot was used in recent elections in the same county and under the same rules and, again, the Democrats did not complain. The overwhelming majority of voters who used the ballot in this election understood it and they cast valid votes. Our lawyers have confirmed the legality of this ballot. And we have with us here today relevant copies — copies of the relevant Florida statutes if you would like to have them.


The Gore campaign has also tried to make a lot of the fact that double-marked ballots are not counted. A key principle in American elections is one person, one vote. If we have ballots with two votes, of course we can't count them, and of course we can't guess about them.

Ballots that are double-marked can't be evidence of the voter's intent to vote one way or the other. No jurisdiction in the United States of America would accept such a ballot as a valid vote, and Florida law specifically does not. This happens in every precinct and in every election.

We understand and I understand personally, because I've been involved in them, that it is frustrating to lose an election by a narrow margin, but it happens. And it happened to the Republican presidential candidates in 1960 and in 1976. Both Vice President Nixon and President Ford put the country's interests first. They accepted the vote for the good of the country.

It is important, ladies and gentlemen, that there be some finality to the election process. What if we insisted on recounts in other states that today are very, very close — for example, in Wisconsin, or in Iowa, or, if we should happen to lose it, in New Mexico.

Let the country step back for a minute and pause and think about what's at stake here. This may be the last chance to do that. There is no reasonable end to this process if it slips away. The purpose of our national election is to establish a constitutional government, not unending legal wrangling.

We will, therefore, vigorously oppose the Gore campaign's efforts to keep recounting, over and over, until it happens to like the result. For the good of the country, and for the sake of our standing in the world, the campaigning should end and the business of an orderly transition should begin.

Q: Mr. Secretary, are you saying that Vice President Gore should concede before next Friday's official count here in Florida ends?

BAKER: I didn't say that, but let me say that I am drawn back to the memory of 1976. I was in the room when many people were arguing to President Ford that he should insist upon a recount, because he was only some 7,000 votes or so down in Ohio, and the change of a few votes would have tipped the election. And he said, "No." He said, "That's not what would be good for the country."

What I am saying here is that Florida has voted twice; Governor Bush won the first vote. We have had a transparent and fair and orderly recount, and he has won that. And there have been no challenges, by way of vote fraud or otherwise in the recount.

Q: How long is too long to wait for a result here?

BAKER: The law of Florida requires that with respect to the overseas ballots, we wait until they can legally be counted. They have not been counted. The responsible and fair and correct position to take would be for us to acknowledge that if we keep going down the path we're on, to recount after recount of the same ballots, we will be forced to do what might be in our best personal interest.

And what's happening now is not in the best interests of our country. And there's a way to stop that. There's a way to bring this thing back before it spirals totally out of control. And bring it back to rationality and to finality. And that's the responsible position, I think, that it would be my hope that both candidates could take.

Governor Bush has made it very clear that he participated in an open, transparent recount. He's willing to await the judgment of these overseas ballots because they've never been counted. But as far as continuing to play this game of unending wrangling and recount after recount after recount, that's just not something that we can do.

We are more than two months away from the Inauguration. But I would almost bet you that in many foreign countries, they're having a lot of difficulty understanding exactly what's going on here.

Q: Will you challenge the decision?

Baker: I haven't said we would challenge, nor have I said that we would not challenge. Let me say this. We know why the certifications have been delayed from these very same counties where we have these large, unexplained shifts toward the other campaign. If the purpose here is to delay and endless wrangling and recount after recount after recount, that game can be played, but that's not the way— that's not the road we ought to go down, that's what I'm saying.




foxnews.com