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


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (662252)11/23/2004 6:27:06 PM
From: PROLIFE  Respond to of 769670
 
New Mexico Declares Winner in Presidential Poll

[Bush 376,930, Kerry 370,942]

November 23, 2004

The final piece in the U.S. election puzzle fell into place on Tuesday when New Mexico became the last state to determine a winner in the Nov. 2 presidential poll, saying George W. Bush won the sparsely populated state.

In its official tally released on Tuesday, Republican Bush beat Democratic challenger John Kerry by 5,988 votes, Secretary of State Rebecca Vigil-Giron said. The final tally was 376,930 for Bush and 370,942 for Kerry.

story.news.yahoo.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (662252)11/23/2004 6:30:04 PM
From: PROLIFE  Respond to of 769670
 
Biggest County Throws Out 8,000 Provisional Ballots
Cuyahoga County Had Most Provisional Ballots

CLEVELAND -- One out of every three provisional ballots cast in Ohio's most populous county was thrown out by elections officials who ruled the ballots were invalid.

Most of the 8,099 rejected provisional ballots -- 5,595, or 70 percent -- were disqualified because there was no voter registration record for those people.

Cuyahoga County, which includes Cleveland, counted 16,373 of 24,472, or 68 percent, of the provisional ballots cast Nov. 2. Of Ohio's 88 counties, Cuyahoga had the most provisional ballots.

So far, 40 counties had completed checking provisional ballots with 76 percent, or 47,868 of 63,038 ballots, found to be valid, according to a survey by The Associated Press on Tuesday.

Officials in the remaining 48 counties either did not return numerous telephone messages or said they were still processing provisional ballots.

In 2000, about 87 percent of Ohio's provisional ballots were counted.

Provisional ballots are cast when a person's name isn't on registration rolls even though the person claims to be legally registered. The ballots are later reviewed by elections officials, who only count them if registration is confirmed.

They gained attention this year because of several federal lawsuits filed over how they would be cast and counted in what figured to be a close election.

Unofficial vote totals show President Bush beat Democrat John Kerry by 136,000 votes in Ohio, and Kerry has conceded there aren't enough outstanding votes to swing the state -- and the election -- his way.

In the 2000 election, 17 percent of Cuyahoga's provisional ballots were invalidated.

The numbers may change slightly when elections workers finalize counts before the board votes on Monday to certify the election results, director Michael Vu said.

Election officials in Cleveland on Monday posted the lists of provisional voters whose ballots were accepted and rejected. Vu said any concrete evidence that might reinstate discarded ballots will be considered this week, before the tally is finalized.

"Elections will never be perfect, because there's a human factor involved," he said.

Some election volunteers said they worried problems such as confusion among poll workers about provisional-ballot procedures and errors that prevented legitimate voters from being registered in time for the election.

"I find it inconceivable that over 5,000 voters in the county would wait an hour in the pouring rain to vote if they haven't registered," said Norm Robbins, a neuroscience professor at Case Western Reserve University who volunteered for the Greater Cleveland Voter Registration Coalition.

Robert Bennett, chairman of the Cuyahoga elections board and the Ohio Republican Party, said provisionals were cross-checked by name and address before they were disqualified. He acknowledged that errors may have seeped into the system.

"We like to think it's a perfect system, but it's not," Bennett said. "We try to get it as perfect as we can."

nbc4i.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (662252)11/24/2004 4:01:29 AM
From: tonto  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Can Bush cut the deficit in half?


Sure, some economists say -- as long as the economy keeps growing and Congress keeps the federal checkbook closed.

By Philipp Harper

Recently awakening from a fiscal lost weekend that lasted four years, President Bush has taken the pledge, promising to cut the federal budget deficit in half by 2008.

Can he do it?

Maybe. And if the economy cooperates, maybe more easily than most people imagine.

The larger question is: Will it matter? Can any short-term deficit reduction, however successful, be more than an exercise in futility given the entitlement tsunami that will roll ashore in a few years when millions of baby boomers begin to retire?

To stanch that kind of budgetary bleeding, serious structural changes must be made to programs like Social Security and Medicare. So far the appetite for even discussing such changes, let alone instituting them, is scant.

But first things first. In addition to trying to wrap up nine spending bills for 2005, lawmakers this week are raising the national debt limit by $800 billion to above $8 trillion -- to avoid the first-ever default on the nation's debts. Banks and insurers
check your credit.
So should you.


It is the third time the Bush administration has had to seek a higher debt limit, leading to some tension within Republican ranks.

The good news for the president, at least in the short term, is that the next four years offer the chance for relatively painless deficit reduction as long as the economy can maintain the momentum regained after several years of sluggish growth.

Can we sustain the growth?
U.S. gross domestic product grew at a better than 4% clip in fiscal 2004, and if it can maintain that pace for the next several years, the president may be able to achieve his goal of halving the $413 billion deficit rung up in 2004 essentially by doing nothing, says Stephen Moore, president of the Club for Growth and a senior fellow at the libertarian Cato Institute.

“I see no reason we can’t have 4% growth,” Moore says.

But others aren’t quite so optimistic. Jeremy Siegel, a professor of finance at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, says such a robust growth rate might be sustainable if accompanied by commensurate productivity gains and stimulative changes to the tax code, including revising the alternative minimum tax so it takes less of a bite from the middle class.

“I think it’s possible,” Siegel says, “though it’s a little bit on the high side.”



An important naysayer is the Congressional Budget Office, which projects a better than 4% increase in GDP for fiscal 2005, but sees growth averaging just 3% over the following four years.

If those projections are correct, then growth alone can’t be relied on to cut the deficit. Either taxes will have to be raised or federal spending cut. Since the president is adamantly opposed to the former, reducing spending appears to be the only game in town.

Fading hopes for fiscal restraint
Having to rely on the Bush administration to make hard spending choices does not inspire general confidence. Moore, for instance, while upbeat about the economy’s strength, is much less sanguine about the prospects for fiscal restraint.

“Bush has been pretty bad on the budget,” he says, “so I don’t have a high degree of confidence we’ll see the spending discipline I’d like to see.”

That’s why Moore endorses passage of a new budget act that ties spending growth to increases in inflation and population. During the first Bush term, spending grew at double that rate.

Holding increases in spending to between 3% and 4% a year through 2008 would slash the deficit $100 billion, Moore says.

If Moore is made skeptical by the Bush spending record, it drives others almost to despair.

Lack of will for spending cuts
“There’s nothing in the record of the Bush administration, or in what the president said on the campaign trail, that should give anyone optimism that he can come close to meeting his goal,” says Harvard economist Benjamin Friedman.

Dismissing a growth fix for the deficit as “pretty unlikely,” Friedman also speculates that any action on taxes will entail further cuts, not increases. “One view is that the tax-cutting constituency was an important part of the president’s re-election and is entitled to some reward,” he says.

That leaves spending cuts as the only possible remedy, but Friedman sees the administration lacking the will to make them. Military spending is off limits because of the war in Iraq, he says, and while there are proposals for restructuring the massive entitlements of Social Security and Medicare, there is no “appetite for tackling these.”

Nor is there any reason to believe the “remarkably small” part of the budget not devoted to defense and Social Security and Medicare will be held in check, not when the president, in his first term,“ signed a bill that doubled farm subsidies and showed no resistance to very padded highway bills.”

“The good news would be that the deficit does not get larger,” Friedman says. “It’s a tragedy because this is the decade we should have been running surpluses” in advance of the budget drain represented by soon-to-be-retiring baby boomers.

Over the next 30 years, the Concord Coalition estimates, the cost of Social Security and Medicare and Medicaid will grow from 8% of GDP to more than 16%, and the “resulting deficits and debt will eventually overwhelm the economy” unless there is significant realignment.

The pressure begins in earnest in 2008 when the oldest baby boomers reach 62 and become eligible to claim early Social Security benefits. So even if the president is able to reach his short-term deficit goal, it may amount to nothing more than a political triumph that has little impact beyond the four-year horizon.

Says Wharton’s Siegel: “You might have a good year in 2008 and then very bad years in 2009, 2010 and 2011.”