-Caveat Lector-

From:  radtimes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date:  Thu Nov 22, 2001  7:44 am
Subject:  So Bush Did Steal the White House

So Bush Did Steal the White House
<http://www.consortiumnews.com/2001/112101a.html>

By Robert Parry
November 22, 2001

George W. Bush now appears to have claimed the most powerful office in the
world by blocking a court-ordered recount of votes in Florida that likely
would have elected Al Gore to be president of the United States.

A document, revealed by Newsweek magazine
<http://www.msnbc.com/news/660124.asp>, indicates that the Florida recount
that was stopped last year by five Republicans on the U.S. Supreme Court
would have taken into account so-called "overvotes" that heavily favored Gore.
If those "overvotes" were counted, as now it appears they would have been,
Gore would have carried Florida regardless of what standard of
chad  dimpled, hanging, punched-through  was used in counting the so-called
"undervotes," according to an examination of those ballots by a group of
leading news organizations.

In other words, Bush lost not only the national popular vote by more than a
half million ballots, but he would have lost the key state of Florida and
thus the presidency, if Florida's authorities had been allowed to count the
votes that met the state's legal requirement of demonstrating the clear
intent of the voter.

The Newsweek disclosure  a memo that the presiding judge in the state
recount sent to a county canvassing board  shows that the judge was
instructing the county boards to collect "overvotes" that had been rejected
for indicating two choices for president when, in reality, the voters had
made clear their one choice.

"If you would segregate 'overvotes' as you describe and indicate in your
final report how many where you determined the clear intent of the voter,"
wrote Judge Terry Lewis, who had been named by the Florida Supreme Court to
oversee the statewide recount, "I will rule on the issue for all counties."
Lewis's memo to the chairman of the Charlotte County canvassing board was
written on Dec. 9, 2000, just hours before Bush succeeded in getting five
conservative justices on the U.S. Supreme Court to stop the Florida recount.
Lewis has said in more recent interviews that he might well have expanded
the recount to include those "overvotes." Indeed, it would be hard to
imagine that he wouldn't count those legitimate votes once they were
recovered by the counties and were submitted to Lewis.

The "overvotes" in which voters marked the name of their choice and also
wrote in his name would be even more clearly legal votes than the so-called
"undervotes" which were kicked out for failing to register a choice that
could be read by voting machines.

                                Misguided Articles

This new information indicating that the wrong presidential candidate moved
into the White House also makes a mockery of the Nov. 12 front-page stories
of the New York Times, the Washington Post and other leading news outlets,
which stated that Bush would have won regardless of the U.S. Supreme
Court's ruling.

Those stories were based on the hypothetical results if the state-ordered
recount had looked only at  "undervotes." The news organizations assumed,
incorrectly it now appears, that the "overvotes" would have been excluded
from such a tally, leaving Bush with a tiny lead.

In going with the "Bush Wins" headlines, the news organizations downplayed
their more dramatic finding that Gore would have won if a full statewide
recount had been conducted in accordance with state law. Using the
clear-intent-of-the-voter standard, Gore beat Bush by margins ranging from
60 to 171 votes, depending on what standard was used in judging the
"undervotes."

Beyond the big newspapers' false assumptions about the state recount, the
news stories showed a pro-Bush bias in their choice of language and the
overall slant of the articles.

The New York Times, for instance, used the word "would" and even
declarative statements when referring to Bush prevailing in hypothetical
partial recounts. By contrast, the word "might" was used when mentioning
that Gore topped Bush if all ballots were considered.

"A comprehensive review of the uncounted Florida ballots," the Times wrote,
"reveal that George W. Bush would have won even if the United States
Supreme Court had allowed the statewide manual recount of the votes that
the Florida Supreme Court had ordered to go forward. Contrary to what many
partisans of former Vice President Al Gore have charged, the United State
Supreme Court did not award an election to Mr. Bush that otherwise would
have been won by Mr. Gore."

Two paragraphs later, the Times noted that the examination of all rejected
ballots "found that Mr. Gore might have won if the courts had ordered a
full statewide recount. … The findings indicate that Mr.  Gore might have
eked out a victory if he had pursued in court a course like the one he
publicly advocated when he called on the state to 'count all the votes.'"
Left out of that formulation, which suggests that Gore was a hypocrite, is
the fact that Bush rejected Gore's early proposal for a full statewide
recount. Bush also waged a relentless campaign of obstruction that left no
time for the state courts to address the equal-protection-under-the-law
concerns raised by the U.S. Supreme Court in its final ruling on Dec. 12,
2000.
Note also how the Times denigrates as misguided Gore "partisans" those
American citizens who concluded, apparently correctly, that the U.S.
Supreme Court awarded the election to Bush.

The headlines, too, favored Bush. The Times' front-page headline on Nov. 12
read, "Study of Disputed Florida Ballots Finds Justices Did Not Cast the
Deciding Vote." The Washington Post's headline read, "Florida Recounts
Would Have Favored Bush."

                                Spreading Confusion

The pro-Bush themes in the headlines and stories were repeated over and
over by television and other newspapers, creating a widespread belief among
casual news consumers that Bush had prevailed in the full statewide
recount, rather than only in truncated recounts based on dubious hypotheses.
Now, Judge Lewis's memo undercuts both the tone and the content of those
news reports. It is certainly not clear anymore that the state-ordered
recount would have favored Bush. It also appears likely that the
interference by the U.S. Supreme Court was decisive. Based on the new
evidence, the major newspapers look to be wrong on both these high-profile
points.

Beyond Gore's narrow victory from the recoverable ballots, the news
organizations concluded  but played down  that Gore lost thousands of
unrecoverable ballots because of flawed ballot designs in several
Democratic strongholds. Gore lost other votes because Gov.  Jeb Bush's
administration disqualified hundreds of predominantly black voters who were
falsely labeled felons.

The New York Times also reported that Bush achieved a net gain of about 290
votes by getting illegally cast absentee votes counted in Republican
counties while enforcing the rules strictly in Democratic counties. Though
the new recount tallies did not include any adjustments for these
irregularities, the news organizations estimated that Gore lost tens of
thousands of votes from these disparities, compared to Bush's official
victory margin of 537 votes.

For months, the leading news organizations have been bending over backwards
to protect Bush's fragile legitimacy, possibly out of concern for the
nation's image in a time of crisis. Yet, whatever the motivation for trying
to make Bush look good, the evidence is now overwhelming that Bush
strong-armed his way, illegitimately, to the presidency.

In the days immediately after the election, Bush obstructed a full-and-fair
recount in Florida, even dispatching hooligans from outside the state to
intimidate vote counters. When Gore pressed for recounts in the courts,
Bush sent in lawyers to prevent the tallies.  Then, after losing before the
Florida Supreme Court and the federal appeals court, Bush ultimately got a
friendly hearing from five political allies on the U.S. Supreme Court.

If Bush truly respected the precepts of democracy and what those principles
mean to the world, he could have joined Gore in demanding as full and fair
a Florida recount as possible. He could have accepted the results, win or
lose.
Instead Bush opted for the opposite course, deciding that his getting the
White House was more important than the voters having their judgment
accepted, both nationally and in Florida. By refusing to hold Bush
accountable for his key role in thwarting the voters' will, the major news
organizations are not doing the cause of democracy any service.
It turns out that the thousands of demonstrators who protested Bush's
Inauguration were closer to the truth when they shouted at his motorcade,
"Hail to the Thief!"

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