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Strategies & Market Trends : VOLTAIRE'S PORCH-MODERATED -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: stockman_scott who wrote (17890)11/20/2000 8:39:03 AM
From: bela_ghoulashi  Respond to of 65232
 
Disenfranchising the military:


BY ROBERT NOVAK SUN-TIMES COLUMNIST
WASHINGTON--It was 4:30 a.m. in Jacksonville, Fla., Saturday when two Democratic lawyers pumped their fists in the air and congratulated each other. The local canvassing board had just thrown out overseas absentee ballots of 44 U.S. service personnel. Their defect: no postmarks.

The board disenfranchising the service personnel was controlled by Republicans, an irony reflective of the fight for Florida. Befuddled Republicans were acting like good bureaucrats, following the letter of the law. Delighted Democrats were part of a coolly crafted scheme to win Florida--and the presidency. While granting maximum latitude in divining intentions of Democratic senior citizens on the south Florida Gold Coast, the predominantly Republican votes of young men and women serving their country abroad would be scrutinized with no latitude.

When Al Gore and George W. Bush finished in a Florida dead heat, Republicans viewed it like a normal recount. Democrats, in contrast, treated it like a continuation of the 2000 campaign.

Gore's operatives have made no secret of their Florida arithmetic. They calculated that the 300-vote Bush statewide margin following the full machine recount would be erased by Gold Coast hand recounts so long as Gore's deficit on overseas absentee ballots did not exceed 1,000 votes. The Gore campaign worked to make sure that did not happen.

Mark Herron, a lawyer from the state capital of Tallahassee engaged in the Gore campaign legal effort, last Wednesday sent off a five-page letter to colleagues around the state addressed to "FDP (Florida Democratic Party) Lawyer." The subject: "Overseas Absentee Ballot Review and Protest." It amounted to a quickie guide for tossing out the serviceman's vote.

It worked. In Jacksonville, officials ignored an affidavit from an aircraft carrier postal clerk swearing that mail sent by naval personnel often lacks a postmark. Consequently, plenty of sailors lost their vote at 4:30 Saturday morning (including, for example, Donnie Haynes, Michael Gentry and Clifford Shearer from the USS George Washington).

Brevard County Republican Chairman Ray Marino went home at 11:30 p.m. Friday after seven and one-half hours of inspecting overseas ballots and wrote this memo:

"Gore had five attorneys there. Their sole objective was to disenfranchise the military absentee votes. They challenged each and every vote. Their sole intent was to disqualify each and every absentee voter. They constantly challenged military votes that were clearly legitimate, but they were able to disqualify them on a technicality."

In Broward County, 92 overseas ballots were accepted and 304 rejected. In Miami-Dade County, 110 out of 113 were turned down. Statewide, 2,203 ballots were accepted and 1,420 rejected. As a result, Bush's net overseas gain was only 630, for an overall Florida lead of 930.

That meant only 930 votes need be won by Gore in the hand-counting of heavily Democratic Broward, Miami-Dade and Palm Beach counties. They were working hard at it. David Fulcher, a lawyer from Jackson, Miss., sent to Palm Beach to help out, described to me a scene of chaos and confusion--of Bush ballots put in the Gore pile, followed by protests and arguments.

It became clear at midweek, however, that Palm Beach would not yield enough new Gore votes. Pressure was successfully applied to canvassing boards in Broward and Miami-Dade to reverse themselves and order countywide hand recounts. But late Saturday, when Gore planners became concerned about surpassing the 930-vote margin in the three counties, the rules were suddenly changed to permit easier tests for reading the intention of any voter who failed to make a hole in the punch card.



To: stockman_scott who wrote (17890)11/20/2000 9:06:50 AM
From: RocketMan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
Florida Voter's FAQ

1. I live in Palm Beach County, but don't know how to vote. Can you help me?

No problem, just show up and punch something if you can. If you can't punch anything, that's fine too. We know who you want to vote for (wink, wink), and will determine your intent afterwards.

2. I live in the Panhandle, but don't know how to vote. Can you help me?

Nope. Read the instructions, fool. Punch the hole all the way through. If you don't, we'll recount it ONCE, because the damn law says we have to.

3. I'm in the military on a ship and sometimes I can't get my absentee ballot postmarked. Can I vote?

Listen you little MAGGOT! Drop down and gimme five! I'm gonna be looking for your SISSY ballot when it comes in and I'm gonna personally shove it up your .... And don't ask again! Now go clean something!

4. I'm a convicted felon. Can I vote?

No problemo! Just try to be out of jail on election day, cause it's hard for us to get the machine inside the jail.

5. I'm a Republican and think your methods are biased.

You must be some kind of political hack. We are only trying to do a full, fair, and accurate accounting of votes.

6. I'm a janitor. What should I do with all these chads on the floor?

Just put them in the Gore box.