SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Impeach George W. Bush -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (1055)1/2/2001 9:43:14 AM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
Now it's unofficial: Gore did win Florida

Ed Vulliamy in New York
December 24, 2000

As George W. Bush handed further key
government posts to hardline Republican
right-wingers, an unofficial recount of votes
in Florida appeared to confirm that Bush
lost the US presidential election.

Despite the decision by the US Supreme
Court to halt the Florida recount in the
contested counties, American media
organisations, includ ing Knight Ridder -
owner of the Miami Herald - have
commissioned their own counts, gaining
access to the ballots under Freedom of
Information legislation. The result so far,
with the recounting of so-called
'undervotes' in only one county completed
by Friday night, indicates that Al Gore is
ahead by 140 votes.

Florida's 25 electoral college votes won
Bush the presidency by two seats last
Monday after the Supreme Court refused
to allow the counting of 45,000 discarded
votes. But as the media recount was
suspended for Christmas, the votes so far
tallied in Lake and Broward counties have
Gore ahead in the race for the pivotal
state, and hence the White House.

Gore's lead is expected to soar when
counting resumes in the New Year and
Miami votes are counted. In a separate
exercise, the Miami Herald commissioned
a team of political analysts and pollsters
to make a statistical calculation based on
projections of votes by county, concluding
that Gore won the state by 23,000.

The media initiative is likely to bedevil
Bush in the weeks to come, thickening
the pall of illegitimacy that will hang over
his inauguration on 20 January.

It has already led to a face-off between
almost all the news media organisations
in the state and Bush's presidential team.
In the most extreme example of the Bush
camp's desperation to avoid a recount, the
new director of the Environment Protection
Agency, Christine Todd Whitman, has
proposed that the Florida ballots be
sealed for 10 years.

Bush's spokesman Tucker Eskew
dismissed the recount as
'mischief-making' and 'inflaming public
passions' while his brother, Florida
governor Jeb Bush, accused the papers of
'trying to rewrite history'.

Meanwhile, Bush made his boldest
ideological statement yet with the
appointment of John Ashcroft as Attorney
General.

The appointment is especially significant,
because as head of the Justice
Department Ashcroft would be the man to
bring any felony charges against
President Bill Clinton over the Lewinsky
affair. During the scandal, Ashcroft was
among the loudest and shrillest voices for
impeachment.

There have been many calls to
President-elect Bush to pardon his
predecessor as a sign of peace, but he
made a point of rejecting them.

Ashcroft lost his Missouri Senate seat to
the widow of the state's popular Democrat
governor, Mel Carnahan. From the family
of a Pentacostal minister, he is an
outspoken social conservative and an ally
of the extremist Pat Robertson.

Ashcroft represents a host of militant
committees and activist groups, of which
the Christian Coalition is most prominent.
He is an opponent not only of abortion but
even - as he said in one speech - of
dancing.


observer.co.uk