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


To: puborectalis who wrote (87956)11/26/2000 11:24:30 AM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
From Florida, Gore attorney David Boies said: ``We won't have a legal
winner tonight because the contest doesn't start until Monday morning,''
referring to the campaign's plans to protest some county results in state
courts.

Republican lawmakers in Florida have considered convening a special
session of the GOP-majority Legislature, possibly this week, to intervene on
behalf of Bush if necessary.

``We're getting closer and closer to the Florida Legislature to involve
themselves,'' Republican Mike Fasano, the Florida House majority leader,
said Sunday on NBC's ``Meet the Press.''

If the Florida election is certified for Gore, or certified for Bush but with a
tangle of legal challenges, the Legislature could try to take the extraordinary
step of selecting a slate of electors aligned with Bush. Florida's 25 votes in
the Electoral College (news - web sites) are key to the presidential election.

``There isn't any interest in conceding anything at this point,'' U.S. Sen. Tom
Daschle of South Dakota, the Senate's Democratic leader, said on NBC
when whether Gore should give up if he trails after the certification.

Asked when it should all end, Daschle said when ``we have exhausted all of
the questions to the best of our ability'' - which he said could take a week or
two.

Former GOP presidential candidate Bob Dole said there probably ``shouldn't
be any big celebration'' even though he thought Bush would be certified
Sunday night.

``If George Bush is certified the winner at 5 or 6 o'clock tonight, I think the
great majority of the American people will say, `Enough is enough. This is
four times Governor Bush has been declared the winner. Lets get ready for
the presidency on Jan 20,''' Dole said on ABC's ``This Week.''

Dole, who lost to Bill Clinton in 1996, said Americans should feel the same
way if Gore wins the official vote tally.

The hand recount in Florida's Broward County finished just before midnight
Saturday, cutting deeply into the Republican's lead. Officials in Palm Beach
County plodded through the night, releasing the results of less than 50
precincts.

The two counties employed different standards for assessing ballots.

Broward County cut 567 votes from the Bush lead statewide. Some of that
was offset by review of overseas military ballots in several other counties.

In Palm Beach, the three canvass board members, all Democrats, had
examined more than 4,000 of some 9,500 ballots in dispute because voting
machines could not clearly read a presidential choice.

The results released by early Sunday, from 369 of 637 precincts overall,
disappointed Democrats who had hoped to pick up hundreds of additional
votes for Gore.

Observers on both sides said Gore had gained fewer than 100 votes by early
Sunday in Palm Beach, and the only official result had Gore up by 46 votes.

In addition, five counties - Hillsborough, Okaloosa, Orange, Pasco and Polk - faced Republican lawsuits filed
late Saturday or planned Sunday morning to force review of those ballots.

In a blow to Bush, the Florida Supreme Court (news - web sites) ruled last week that the recounts could
continue. Gore requested hand counts in hopes of turning up previously uncounted votes in heavily Democratic
counties.

But the court set the Sunday deadline for the counties to turn in amended results, and that turned into bad news
for Gore. Miami-Dade County, seen as Gore's richest source of potential new votes, said it could not meet the
deadline and dropped its recount.

Republicans said the Sunday deadline offered at least a public relations opportunity for the Texas governor - if
he still led Gore.

But they insisted there would be no gloating.

Whether or not Bush declares outright victory and suggests that Gore concede depends on the vote totals
Sunday, a senior official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The U.S. Supreme Court (news - web sites) is hearing arguments on Dec. 1 on Bush's case against recounts -
meaning the nation may not know its 43rd president until legal wrangling wraps up sometime in December.

Bush, too, was prepared to protest vote counts in the certification, whether or not Gore overtakes him. Under
Florida law, the loser can challenge the election after it is certified, and the winner can file a ``counter-contest''
raising separate complaints.

The vice president's staff was making tentative plans for a Monday address by Gore, a senior adviser said on
condition of anonymity. The speech would give the vice president a chance to explain why he was fighting the
certification, they said, and set the stage for the historic clash before the U.S. Supreme Court.