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


To: Proud_Infidel who wrote (321)11/14/2000 1:01:58 AM
From: Herschel Rubin  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3887
 
The People Have Spoken. Will Gore Listen?
By John H. Fund, a member of the Journal's editorial board.

November 10, 2000

___________________________________________________________


The most consequential legal battle ever involving an election is about to be waged. Even before the results of the Florida recount were announced, Gore campaign chairman William Daley declared that "if the will of the people is to prevail, Al Gore should be awarded a victory."

Mr. Gore has dispatched a chartered plane filled with 75 lawyers and political operatives to investigate what Florida's Democratic chairman Bob Poe calls "thousands of reports" of voting irregularities. Republicans have sent their own team. The Justice Department says it will review Democratic allegations of missing ballot boxes. Jesse Jackson has called for an investigation of possible intimidation of "minority communities" that lowered Mr. Gore's vote in Florida. "We are talking about voter suppression, frightening people away from the polls," says NAACP chairman Julian Bond.

Unfortunately for Mr. Bond it appears that while only 15% of Florida's voters are black, on Election Day they made up 16% of those who cast ballots. Hardly evidence of "voter suppression."

...

[HUH????? GO FIGURE...]


For those of you who have a Wall Street Journal Interactive subscription, here's the entire article :

interactive.wsj.com



To: Proud_Infidel who wrote (321)11/14/2000 1:04:41 AM
From: Herschel Rubin  Respond to of 3887
 
Strong words from George Will:
____________________________________________________________

By George Will

Published Nov. 12, 2000

WASHINGTON--So the Clinton-Gore era culminates with an election as stained as the blue dress, a Democratic chorus complaining that the Constitution should not be the controlling legal authority, and Clinton's understudy dispatching lawyers to litigate this: "It depends on what the meaning of 'vote' is."

The mendacity of Al Gore's pre-election campaign is pertinent to the post-election chaos. He ran with gale-force economic winds at his back, and with a powerful media bias pulling him along. (Even on election night: by calling Florida for Gore before all Floridians had voted, the networks almost certainly hurt Republican turnout in Florida, and out West.) Yet Gore probably lost. Why? Consider his political ethics, which flow from his corrupting hunger for power.

He staggered Bill Bradley in an Iowa debate by asking why Bradley voted against flood relief for Iowa. Bradley voted for $4.8 billion of relief, and opposed--as did the Clinton-Gore administration--only an amendment to add $900 million. When Gore made a false claim about traveling to Texas to inspect disaster damage with the head of federal emergency services, his heap of fabrications had reached critical mass, triggering ridicule and draining credibility. He is, strictly speaking, unbelievable.

His serial mendacity should be remembered during his seamless post-election transition to desperately seeking lawyering strategies and a friendly court to hand him the presidential election. Gore is the distilled essence of contemporary liberalism, which enjoys imposing its will--about abortion, racial preferences, capital punishment, tobacco, firearms, etc.--through litigation rather than legislation. Liberalism's fondness for judicial fiat rather than democratic decision-making explains the entwinement of the Democratic Party and trial lawyers.

Election Day saw Democrats briefly succeed in changing the rules during the game in Missouri: Their lawyers found a friendly court to order St. Louis polls to stay open three hours past the lawful 7 p.m. closing time. Fortunately, a higher court soon reimposed legality on the Democrats and ordered the polls closed at 7:45. Now in Florida, Democrats want to change the rules after the game.

The Democratic Party dotes on victims, but what, exactly, victimized those 19,000 Palm Beach County voters who, as almost 15,000 in the county did in 1996, botched marking their ballots by punching two candidates for president? It is absurd to say it is "unfair" to do what the law requires--disallow improperly marked ballots. And it is sinister when Democratic voters, after leaving polling places where they could have asked poll workers for guidance or fresh ballots, suddenly "remember" that they might have misread their "butterfly" ballots.

Those ballots have the punch holes down the center and the candidates' names on the "wings." Gore campaign chairman William Daley, of the famously fastidious Cook County Daleys, says such ballots are indefensible--at least he said that, until chief Bush strategist Karl Rove displayed a Cook County butterfly ballot. The Palm Beach ballots were designed by a Democrat and approved by a process that included Democrats, and sample ballots were published in newspapers and mailed to voters--all without eliciting pre-election complaints.

Will instances, real or claimed, of incompetent voting with these ballots (Gore's hired semanticists call this "disenfranchisement") invalidate a presidential election? Not likely. The leading Florida case on confusing ballots holds: Confusion about a ballot will not void an election if the voter, taking "the degree of care commensurate with the solemnity of the occasion," can find the right name. The vast majority of Palm Beach voters could. Unless Florida's Supreme Court, which has approvingly cited this case in other rulings, overturns it, the "confused voter" claims are baseless.

By Nov. 17, Florida's absentee ballots--with a large military, hence Republican, component--will have been counted, probably sealing Bush's win there. By then, millions of as yet uncounted absentee ballots in California and elsewhere may have made Bush the popular vote winner nationally. Even so, Gore operatives probably will still toil to delegitimize the election. Their actions demolish the presidential pretensions of the dangerous man for whom they do their reckless work.

Jesse Jackson, the Democrats' rented ranter, would not have taken his magical mischief tour to Florida, there to excite a sense of victimization, if his party opposed that. All that remains to complete the squalor of Gore's attempted coup d'etat is some improvisation by Janet Reno, whose last Florida intervention involved a lawless SWAT team seizing a 6-year-old. She says there is no federal role, but watch for a "civil rights" claim on behalf of some protected minority, or some other conjured pretext. Remember, Reno is, strictly speaking, unbelievable, and these things will continue until these people are gone.



To: Proud_Infidel who wrote (321)11/14/2000 2:11:37 AM
From: KLP  Respond to of 3887
 
Contrast the 2000 Census and the 2000 Election
....Clinton/Gore wanted "sampling" for the Census, and now they want a "Total Vote Tally"...

Compare the Clinton/Gore Adm position on Census Count 2000 vs their position on the FL debacle! The Census had (they said) to be done by sampling so it was accurate, and the exact numbers weren't as important as the overall trend.....Exactly the opposite way of "thinking" as far as FL goes....Why isn't the mainstream press doing ANY investigative reporting on all sorts of issues??? Wake Up America!

Gore Says Democracy at Stake, Wants Total Vote Tally

By Paul Simao Nov 14 1:05am ET

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (Reuters) - Democrat Al Gore, declaring that U.S. democracy was at stake, pledged Monday to fight for a complete vote tally in Florida, as his legal team challenged a deadline laid down by a Republican official to end vote counting in the state by Tuesday evening. The Tuesday 5 p.m. EST deadline announced by Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris could result in the election of Republican Gov. George W. Bush of Texas, who currently leads Gore in Florida by fewer than 400 votes.

go2net.com

**************************

---snip
Overview

When the federal government undertakes its official count of the population of the United States in the year 2000, the Clinton Administration believes a process of estimation called "sampling" is best way to achieve an accurate count.Congressional Republicans disagree, favoring the traditional head count used in past censuses. Although sampling has already been ruled illegal by a federal court, the Clinton Administration is still proceeding with plans to use it as it appeals its case to the U.S. Supreme Court.

#210 September 1998


The 2000 Census: Sampling or a Straight Count?

by David Almasi
* Sampling could be influenced by partisan politics. An Atlanta Journal and Constitution editorial on June 15, 1998 stated: "We object to sampling because, frankly, we just don't think a highly partisan administration can be trusted to be coldly honest when dealing with a process that, by its nature, involves interpretation, estimation and manipulation of figures. The temptation to 'help' the results along would simply be too great - whether the administration was Democratic or Republican." The Clinton Administration has already been accused of misusing federal agencies like the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Internal Revenue Service, Immigration and Naturalization Service and even the Department of Commerce (which is in charge of the Census Bureau), among others, for political gain.

nationalcenter.org

***********************
S.How does the Census Bureau plan to use sampling now that the Supreme Court has prohibited its use?

On January 25, 1999, the Supreme Court upheld 195, Title 13, United States Code, prohibiting the Census Bureau from using statistical sampling to determine the population count for congressional apportionment purposes (No. 98-564, Clinton, President of the United States, et al. v. Glavin et al., on appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia).

Though the Court's decision does affect the way in which the Census Bureau uses sampling to collect additional information, the Census Bureau will use a sampling ratio of about one long form (sample) questionnaire for every six households to obtain sample data on content as it has in previous censuses. We plan to include sample questions on place of birth, work status last year, income, ancestry, monthly rent, veteran status, disability, plumbing and kitchen facilities, and others. This sample for content provides the necessary data to produce a wide array of information redistricting data is based on 100% data only and on demographic social and economic characteristics of the population as well as the physical and financial characteristics of the housing inventory.

census.gov

*********

For more info....

census.gov

Statistical Sampling in Census 2000