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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JDN who wrote (79140)11/17/2000 6:38:58 AM
From: Mao II  Respond to of 769670
 
JDN: While you might see darkness, others might see that court ruling as reflecting current judicial thinking across the country:

'Hanging chads' often viewed by courts as sign of voter
intent

From CNN's Brooks Jackson

November 16, 2000
Web posted at: 7:08 p.m. EST (0008 GMT)

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- How should Florida count its presidential ballots? If
officials in the Sunshine State follow the trend in other states, they'll count those
"hanging chads" or even "bulging chads" as votes.

The most dramatic recent example is a 1996
Democratic primary for a House seat in
Massachusetts. The state's seven-member
Supreme Judicial Court scrutinized over 956
disputed ballots and declared Rep. William
Delahunt, a Democrat, the winner by counting
ballots that were merely dimpled -- and the chad
not dislodged.

"If the intent of the voter can be determined with
reasonable certainty from an inspection of the
ballot ... effect must be given to that intent and
the vote counted," the Massachusetts court ruled.

It said a voter who failed to push out the chad
completely "could have done a better job
expressing his or her intent. (But) Such a voter
should not automatically be disqualified."

And that's been the trend. A 1990 case in Illinois
hinged on 30 partially punctured punch-card
ballots to determine the Republican primary
winner in a race for the state legislature. The
Supreme Court of Illinois looked at the disputed
ballots and counted them.

"Nothing in our election code ... requires voters to
completely dislodge the chad from the ballot
before their vote will be counted," the court ruled.

In a 1987 Alaska case, the court counted
punch-card votes marked with a pen rather than
punched out. A 1981 Indiana case counted
"hanging chads" on the grounds they indicated
voter intent.

"Anything you cannot clearly determine, you set
aside. And if the contest is still where you can't
decide who wins, then you put that group of
ballots in front of a judge and let a judge make a
decision," said Doug Lewis, executive director of
the Election Center, a non-profit group.

State courts often count ballots where election
administrators don't see clear voter intent, but not
always. A 1984 Louisiana case refused to count
punch-card ballots merely marked with a pencil.

But in other cases, courts look closely for voter
intent. In a dramatic case from South Dakota, one
judge examined two disputed ballots under a
microscope. The county-level race in question
came down to a single bit of bulging or "pregnant" chad, with only two corners
detached.

The South Dakota Supreme Court declared a vote "shall be counted if the voter's
intent is sufficiently plain." The race was declared a tie. The winner was
determined by a game of poker --- which the Republican candidate won with a
pair of tens.

What Florida courts do remains to be seen. The trend in other states might be
summed up by that Illinois decision, which declared that "voters are the owners
of the government."
cnn.com