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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (9677)11/15/2004 11:39:32 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
Monday, November 15, 2004 · Last updated 6:24 p.m. PT

Gregoire edges ahead, boosted by King County

seattlepi.nwsource.com

By REBECCA COOK
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

OLYMPIA, Wash. -- Democrat Christine Gregoire took the
tiniest of leads on Monday night against Republican Dino
Rossi in the governor's race.

Gregoire edged ahead by 158 votes out of more than 3
million cast, after days of trailing Rossi. Democrats
celebrated when they heard that election officials in King
County - which favors Gregoire - discovered they had
10,000 more uncounted ballots than previously estimated.


"I'm beginning to think we might win this," said state
Democratic Party Chairman Paul Berendt.

Rossi's campaign was thrown for a loop by the King County
news - just the latest twist in the two-week roller coaster
ride that is the 2004 gubernatorial election.

"We definitely want to find out where all these additional
ballots came from," Rossi spokeswoman Mary Lane said.
"We can still win this thing. Obviously it's going to be a
much closer race, where literally every vote will count."

On Monday
morning, King
County estimated it
had about 11,000
votes remaining to
count. But that
estimate was revised
upward to 21,000.

Bobbie Egan,
spokeswoman for the
King County
elections office, said
the county verified
more provisional ballots than expected and absentee ballot
turnout was higher than projected. Election workers
counted 17,000 ballots Monday, so 4,000 remain to be
counted. Wednesday is the deadline for counties to certify
their election results to the secretary of state.

Gregoire has served as state attorney general for the last 12
years and ran on her record of public service, while also
promising change in the governor's office. Rossi, a
commercial real estate agent and two-term state senator,
touted his business experience and told voters he would be
the real candidate for change. No Republican has been
elected governor in Washington since 1980.
>

Also on Monday, Gregoire supporters turned in affidavits
from 400 King County voters whose provisional and
absentee ballots were in question. The affidavits should
enable those ballots to be counted.

Across the state, about 22,000 votes remain to be counted.
Of the six counties with more than a thousand votes
outstanding, three favor Rossi - Benton, Skagit and Yakima
- and three favor Gregoire - King, Thurston and Whatcom.

Libertarian Ruth Bennett has 62,000 votes, about 2
percent of the total.

After the votes are counted and Washington finally has a
winner, the next big question is whether there will be a
recount.

If the margin of victory is less than 2,000 votes and one-half
of 1 percent, state law requires an automatic recount,
funded by taxpayers. The recount would probably take
about four days, state Elections Director Nick Handy said.

Candidates and political parties can also demand a recount
themselves, regardless of how close the election is -
provided they pay for it. A machine recount costs 15 cents a
ballot, or about $501,000 for the governor's race, and a
hand recount costs 25 cents a ballot, or $835,000. The
candidates would have to wait until after Dec. 2, when the
secretary of state certifies election results, to ask for a
recount.

None of the six recounts in statewide elections since 1968
has changed the final results of an election.

Both campaigns played their recount strategies close to the
vest on Monday, preferring to concentrate on the actual
count.

Lane said Republican observers in polls and vote-counting
places haven't reported any kind of shenanigans, so the
Rossi campaign is satisfied for now that the first count will
be accurate.

Spokesman Morton Brilliant said Gregoire's campaign
wants to make sure valid votes get counted in the first
place. If it comes to a recount, he said, "We'll be prepared."

---

On the Net:

Election results: vote.wa.gov



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (9677)11/15/2004 11:41:05 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
Locke didn't run for re-election.