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To: Nick Kline who wrote (53174)11/11/2000 3:51:34 PM
From: johnd  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74651
 
Allegations Of Voter Intimidation By
Democrats Swirl In Miami
Friday, November 10, 2000
William LaJeunesse

* More Election Stories and Video

African-American voters make up 15 percent of the electorate in Florida. Al Gore won
their overwhelming support on Tuesday, receiving an unprecedented 93 percent of the
black vote, seven percent more than Bill Clinton got in 1996.

But questions are now circulating about some of
those voters being unfairly and illegally influenced -
even intimidated - by Democratic campaign workers
in certain precincts of Miami's Little Haiti.

A near-perfect turnout in a heavily Democratic
district helped sweep the state's first
Haitian-American state legislator, a well-known
activist and attorney, into office with more than 80
percent of the vote.

The Republican candidate, a political novice, is
crying foul, saying his opponent's supporters
prodded some voters into voting a straight
Democratic ticket.

More than 100,000 Haitians live in Miami-Dade County, many of them in Little Haiti. Most are new
to America, new to democracy and are unfamiliar with the U.S. election process.

That leaves them vulnerable to intimidation, say campaign workers and a prominent Haitian
minister.

"I believe there should be an investigation into the Haitian vote," said Rev. Phipps St. Hilaire of
Christian Churches United. "There were a lot of calls here from people who said there were people
who intimidated them."

Phipps said he received at least three dozen complaints from constituents that Democratic
campaign workers for Al Gore and state assemblyman Philip Brutus unfairly and illegally violated
the 50-foot rule around some precincts in Little Haiti.

The rule prohibits workers from interfering with voters' access to the polls or trying to pressure
them.

Some campaign volunteers actually entered the precincts, Phipps said, telling voters what holes
to punch and forcing sheets of paper into their hands with the numbers to punch listed on them.

Pauline Charles, a campaign worker for Brutus's opponent, Republican Reggie Thompson, said
she saw volunteers helping voters fill out their ballots.

"I heard him tell him, 'Say no to all of this, punch this number and make sure you vote for Gore.
Punch number 85, I mean 86 for Brutus.' And you know, giving them exact numbers to the point
where he had it written down on a piece of paper just in case they got confused and they'd take
the piece of paper and punch in the numbers," Charles said.

"It was wrong," said co-worker Kathy Brinson. "It was wrong for my candidate. We were outside,
50 feet away from the building like the rules said and [the election official] was letting him inside
and nothing was said. It wasn't fair."

Charles and Brinson complained to election officials repeatedly. Finally, they called the police,
and election officials removed the political partisans from the voting area.

But critics say countless Haitian voters at several precincts were unfairly influenced to vote for a
straight Democratic ticket.

"It's not a matter of whether you had a chance to win the race. But you'd like to think that in a
democracy, you'd like to hear everyone has an equal chance," Thompson, the aggrieved
candidate, said.

- FOXNEWS.com's Sharon Kehnemui contributed to this report



To: Nick Kline who wrote (53174)11/11/2000 3:56:49 PM
From: David Howe  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74651
 
nick, As was pointed out after my prior post, the rules we are discussing only apply to paper ballots. They do not apply to electronic / punchcard ballots.

The so called confusing ballot was NOT illegal. This has become quite clear.

Dave