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Politics : Why is Gore Trying to Steal the Presidency? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Golden Domer who wrote (280)11/13/2000 4:43:49 PM
From: MasonS  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3887
 
I would hope that if any extension is granted that Bush would take advantage of it and ask for recount in other counties...not entirely sure if this is possible...



To: Golden Domer who wrote (280)11/13/2000 6:34:49 PM
From: Proud_Infidel  Respond to of 3887
 
GOP Gains in First Round
Of Recounts
Monday, November 13, 2000


• More Election Stories and Video

Recounts — both manual and machine — proceeding in some counties in Florida are favoring George W. Bush so far. But officials with the Texas governor's campaign maintain their opposition to the process regardless of who gains from it.

Peter Cosgrove/AP

Nov. 13: A Volusia County worker holds up a ballot for review in DeLand, Fla., as the recount continues.


Bush showed a net gain of 97 votes in Polk County after a weekend re-scan of ballots there, and squeezed another 21 votes out of Volusia County with 69 of 172 precincts recounted by hand there so far. Hand recounting over the weekend in Palm Beach County turned up a net gain of 39 votes for Vice President Al Gore.

"It doesn't matter whether we gain or lose votes, our principle remains the same — that a hand recount without any standards is unreliable, and as we can see ... often results in chaos," Bush spokesman Ari Fleischer said. "The best course of action is to allow the existing two recounts to stand. Anything less would be so subjective that it would neither be fair nor right."

As of Monday, Bush leads Gore in Florida by 388 votes, with hand recounts proceeding in two counties and on horizon in two others. A federal judge Monday morning refused the Bush campaign's request to halt the manual recount process.

All this, despite word from the Florida Secretary of State that recounts in all of Florida's 67 counties should be completed by 5 p.m. Tuesday and a winner certified by Saturday after overseas absentee ballots are rolled into the totals.

"The law unambiguously states when the process of counting and recounting the votes cast on Election Day must end," Harris said in a written statement distributed in Tallahassee. "For this election, that time is 5 p.m. Nov. 14, which is tomorrow."

Under those constraints, Volusia County, home of the Daytona International Speedway, could be the only one county to finish its work before the deadline. Some 42 officials there began counting the 184,019 presidential ballots there Sunday and said they expected to be finished late Monday.

"The count is going faster than we first expected it would. It looks like all precincts will be counted by tonight, or very early Tuesday morning at the latest," said county spokesman David Byron.

Just in case, the heavily Democratic county sued for the right to complete and certify its manual count regardless of the deadline, and to bar the state from ignoring its results.

Also Monday, Broward County officials said they plan to begin a hand recount of about 6,000 ballots in three precincts. If major problems are found, authorities will consider a full hand count of all precincts in the Democratic stronghold.

And in Miami-Dade County, the state's largest, officials planned to meet Tuesday to consider the Democrats' request for a hand recount.

Under Florida law, manual recounts are allowed if a candidate meets a post-election deadline to request them and the local election board agrees.

— The Associated Press contributed to this report

foxnews.com