-Caveat Lector-

To determine the intent of the law is one thing, but to determine the
intend of thousands of voters, some who probably were street people drug
in by Al Gore and now you know they go into MRDD (Mentally  Retarded)
and drag people who have IQ of 10 to polls, as they do in Ohio (this
started under CFR Celeste then Govenor - people with minds of less than
5 taken to vote).......but this ruling from a Judge, in a circuit court
is a circus.

The intent of the voters as opposed to the intent of the law.....will
have to contact each voter personally to discover what their intent
was.....and that includes the dead seaman on the USS Cole, some of whom
may not have had their votes counted, having been thrown out by democrat
thieves.

Saba

That judge is to - let us say he lacks knowledge of the intent of the
law - the intent is to give each voter one vote for each candidate and
if they are so mentally challenged hey do not know for whom they are
voting, they should as for assistance ....




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Dimpled Chad Count, Judge Rules
Wednesday, November 22, 2000
In a major victory for Al Gore's presidential campaign, a Florida
circuit judge ruled Wednesday afternoon that Palm Beach County must
consider dimpled chad in its manual recount.
Marta Lavandier/APWednesday: Two New York men wearing Bush and Gore
masks rally in front of the Stephen P. Clark Goverment Center in Miami.
Democrats had asked Circuit Judge Jorge Labarga to force the county
elections board to use a broader definition of a valid ballot. The
dimpled ballots could help Gore gain hundreds of votes in the critical
recount.
"Since the will of the people is the paramount consideration, and the
purpose of our election laws is to obtain a correct expression of the
intent of the voters ... that intention should be given effect," Labarga
wrote in the court's ruling.
By contrast, the county election supervisors must reject any vote in
which they cannot discern the voters' intent.
Labarga's decision came on the heels of a ruling in Miami-Dade County
that works in George W. Bush's favor: Election officials in the state's
largest electoral district unanimously voted to stop all hand counting
of presidential ballots.
Labarga's ruling means that Palm Beach County's canvassing board, which
has two Democratic members, must consider up to 2,000 questionable
ballots that had been set aside while the judge considered the case.
Bush, who holds a 930-vote lead over Gore statewide, is battling in
court to halt the hand recounts as error-prone.
By Wednesday morning, workers had recounted all but 102,000 of the
462,350 ballots cast in Palm Beach County on Election Day, and Burton
said he expects the job to be finished by the end of the day. The
canvassing board plans to meet Friday and Saturday to go through the
objectionable ballots and, if necessary, workers would return Sunday to
finish up the hand count.
Palm Beach has worked since 1990 under a rule saying at least one corner
of a chad — the bit of paper that gets pushed through on a punchcard
ballot — must be dislodged for a ballot to count.
But Democratic lawyer Dennis Newman said 557 "dimpled" ballots for Gore
and 260 for Republican George W. Bush have been left out of the count.
Dimpled ballots have an indentation, possibly showing a voter's intent
to select a candidate, but are not pushed all the way through.
Meanwhile, the Palm Beach Post reported on Wednesday that Dennis Newman,
one of Gore's leading men in pushing for the counting of dimpled chads
in the election results, was vehemently opposed to them being use in the
final tally of a 1996 election in which he represented a Democratic
Congressional candidate ahead by a slim margin of votes.
The Post quoted Newman as making arguments similar to those of
Republicans today, arguing to the Boston Globe that too much handling
led to distorted results, saying "I don't think they are handled with
kid gloves."
Given the narrowness of Bush's lead, those dimpled ballots in Palm Beach
county could make a big difference in the presidential race. On Tuesday
alone, officials set aside 1,979 questionable ballots, including dimples
and others. About 30,000 ballots were thrown out during the initial
machine counts, including about 10,000 on which no vote was registered
by the machines.
On Tuesday, no new official numbers were released. Gore had gained three
votes with about one-fifth of the 531 precincts counted in this county.
Miami-Dade Stops Hand Recount
"I do not believe we have the ability to conduct a full, accurate
recount" under the Sunday deadline fixed by the state Supreme Court on
Tuesday night, said Lawrence King, chairman of the Miami-Dade canvassing
board, in explaining the board's surprising decision to stop the hand
recount in the county.
Instead, the three-member panel voted to submit the machine recount from
Nov. 8 as the county's final tally.
Gore adviser William Daley immediately attacked the ruling: "We hope the
counts continue. That's what the Supreme Court wanted," he told
reporters in Washington. He indicated the campaign would seek an appeal
in the courts.
The most likely route was the state circuit court, though Gore's legal
team was considering an appeal directly to the state Supreme Court,
several official said.
The Bush camp took the ruling as a long-awaited sign that the county was
coming to its senses.
"All Americans should breathe a sigh of relief that finally, common
sense has taken over in Miami-Dade County," said Bush spokesman and
Montana Gov. Marc Racicot. "We would encourage ... Palm Beach and
Broward counties to follow this precedent."
Miami-Dade had been on track to complete a hand recount of its 654,000
presidential ballots by Dec. 1. But late Tuesday, the state Supreme
Court said the manual tallies must be completed by this Sunday.
Colin Braley/ReutersWednesday: Miami-Dade County election workers
protest after the county's canvassing board decided to halt the full
count of ballots and only hand-count 'undervote' ballots.
The Miami-Dade decision came after Republicans protested the panel's
vote earlier Wednesday to count only the 10,000 votes that didn't
register a presidential choice when put through a machine.
The board's action was seen by both camps as a setback for the Gore
campaign, which was hoping to make major vote gains in the Miami-Dade
recount.
With the White House at stake, Gore hoped to pick up more votes in
Florida to overcome George W. Bush, who held a 930-vote lead statewide
before hand counts began in three Democratic-leaning counties.
Miami-Dade started its manual tallying on Monday, several days later
than Palm Beach and Broward counties. By Tuesday night, the county had
hand counted only 135 of its 614 precincts — with Gore picking up 157
votes.
Broward May Be First to Finish
Meanwhile, the full hand recount of 588,000 Broward County ballots
neared completion as the state Supreme Court ruled that counters' days
of tedium and tallies were not in vain.
Broward County appeared poised to be the first of the three counties to
complete the process when the counting resumed Wednesday. With all 609
precincts and 41,500 absentee ballots tallied, Gore received a net gain
of 56 votes from the county.
There was even talk of counters working Thanksgiving to ensure the job
was done by the Sunday 5 p.m. deadline.
"I'm very pleased that the Supreme Court of Florida has decided that the
voters who wanted to make a difference in the 43rd president of the
United States will be heard," said Suzanne Gunzburger, a Democrat and
Broward County canvassing board member.
Canvassing board chairman Robert W. Lee said there were 1,000 to 2,000
ballots with dimpled or partially removed chads — the tiny pieces of
paper in punchcard ballots.
— The Associated Press contributed to this story
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