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http://www.wsws.org/articles/2000/nov2000/bush-n16.shtml

WSWS : News & Analysis : North America : US Elections

George W. Bush's three principles: lies, fraud and
theft
By Barry Grey
16 November 2000
Use this version to print

With his nationally televised speech Wednesday night,
Republican Governor George W. Bush became the first
candidate in US history to attempt, openly and before
the American people, to gain the presidency through
the suppression of votes.

In supporting the actions of the Florida state
government - headed by his brother, Governor Jeb Bush - to
disallow the results of hand counts and discard the
votes of thousands of Floridians, George W. Bush piled
one falsehood upon another. As with all practitioners
of the "big lie" technique, his aim was to convince
not by the plausibility of his arguments, but rather
by the sheer brazenness and repetition of his claims.

"All Americans want a fair and accurate count of the
votes in Florida," the Texas governor declared. Not
all Americans. The Bush campaign, as is obvious to all
who have eyes and wish to see, does not want "a fair
and accurate count of the votes in Florida," which is
why it has pursued every possible means to block a
comprehensive count of all the votes cast on election
day.

Bush said he wanted a count "that measures up to the
highest standards and principles outlined in our
Constitutions and our laws." Those standards and
principles are summed up in the motto "one person - one
vote," which is precisely what Bush and his
confederates in Florida are seeking to subvert.

Next Bush enunciated his three principles: "This
process must be fair, this process must be accurate,
and this process must be final." It is obviously not
fair to arbitrarily exclude the votes of people who
went to the polls. It is transparent that the purpose
of such a procedure is to arrive at a result that is
not accurate. As for the principle of finality - for the
Bush camp this means certifying the result that it
wants, not the result dictated by the will of the
electorate.

Bush elaborated on his principle of "fairness": the
vote, he said, must be "fair to voters throughout
America, fair to voters in Florida, and fair to voters
in different counties in Florida." If Bush has his
way, voters throughout America, who cast a plurality
of ballots for Bush's Democratic opponent, will see
their choice overturned on the basis of an overtly
partisan and undemocratic procedure in Florida. Within
Florida itself, thousands of individuals have taken to
the streets to protest their disenfranchisement at the
hands of Bush's local allies, and at least two
counties have been denied their legal right to conduct
a manual recount.

Bush continued: "I honor and respect the value of
every single vote. That's why my campaign supported
the automatic recount of all the votes in Florida."
With regard to the first sentence, candor would have
required Bush to add "in my favor." The second
sentence is a non sequitur: since the initial recount
was automatic, the Bush campaign could not stop it.

The next sentence - "Everyone in Florida has had his or
her vote counted once" - is a brazen lie. As the whole
world knows, tens of thousands of votes, mainly of
black and immigrant workers and other likely Gore
supporters, have not been counted.

In Palm Beach County, for example, a deceptive and
possibly illegal ballot caused 19,000 ballots to be
double-punched, and consequently discarded, in the
initial machine count. In precincts heavily populated
by Haitian-Americans there have been reports of
ballots that were pre-punched for Bush. Tens of
thousands of others who went to the polls carrying
voter registration cards were told by election
officials that they could not vote.

The ballots of thousands of other voters were misread
by voting machines- a discrepancy which can be
corrected only by a hand count, which the Bush camp is
determined to prevent.

Elaborating on his second principle, accuracy, Bush
said, "This process must be accurate. As Americans
have watched on television, they have seen for
themselves that manual counting, with individuals
making subjective decisions about voter intent,
introduces human error and politics into the
vote-counting process."

This is another lie. Even before a single vote was
hand-counted, Bush's initial margin in Florida was cut
by 80 percent when ballots were recounted by machine,
demonstrating the well-known fact that voting machines
are fallible. That is precisely why in state after
state the long-established procedure is for election
authorities to conduct a hand recount in close races.
Bush himself signed a law in Texas declaring hand
counting to be the preferred method for obtaining the
most accurate result. Until the Bush camp invented the
novel theory that human intervention into the
ballot-counting process was intrinsically
undemocratic, it was generally accepted that both
voters and candidates had a right to seek this
recourse when a result was in dispute.

Many have already noted the irony of a man who
campaigned on a platform of "trusting the people" and
empowering local government now expounding on the
organic incompetence and dishonesty of human vote
counters, and the need to ride roughshod over the
decisions of local authorities - which only demonstrates
that hypocrisy goes hand in hand with deceit.

Speaking of the need for finality, Bush said, "This is
precisely why the laws of the state of Florida have
deadlines for certification of the election vote."
Declaring that the deadlines had passed and the votes
had been certified, he echoed the earlier assertion of
Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris - who
happens to be a Bush elector and state co-chair of the
Bush election campaign - that the final result would be
announced on Saturday, once overseas absentee ballots
had been added to the existing official vote count.

The claim that the Bush campaign is guided by the rule
of law is another lie. In the first place, Florida
laws are ambiguous on the finality of the deadline for
accepting ballots from local election authorities, and
they give the secretary of state considerable
discretion. Moreover, the state election laws give
local authorities the right to conduct hand counts, a
right that is rendered meaningless if the secretary of
state arbitrarily refuses to allow them the time
needed to carry out the procedure.

In the event, Harris defied the clear intent of a
state court ruling handed down on Monday affirming the
right of counties to conduct hand counts and barring
her from arbitrarily refusing to accept amended vote
tallies submitted after the 5 PM Tuesday deadline.
This ruling was reinforced Tuesday by the Florida
Supreme Court, which summarily rejected her appeal for
a court order to end all hand counts. Her announcement
Wednesday night rejecting the requests of three
counties to conduct hand counts and submit amended
vote totals preempted further hearings that had been
set by the state Supreme Court for Thursday morning.

Far from upholding the election laws of Florida,
moreover, the Bush campaign has gone into federal
court in an attempt to overturn them, so as to block
counties from carrying out hand counts.

Bush went on to reject the proposal made earlier that
evening by Vice President Gore for a state-wide manual
recount of the votes in Florida. Once again, his
explanation was a combination of falsehood and non
sequitur. He accused Gore of proposing a continuation
of "selective hand recounts that are neither fair nor
accurate, or compounding the error by extending a
flawed process statewide." How the supposed evil of
selectivity would be compounded by making the process
universal, Bush did not say.

A statewide manual recount would be "neither fair nor
accurate," he continued. "It would be arbitrary and
chaotic." This last charge exemplifies another staple
of the Bush camp: accusing your opponent of the very
crimes that you are committing. Those who are
arbitrarily suppressing the voting rights of tens of
thousands of Floridians denounce their opponents for
arbitrariness. Similarly, those who have acted from
day one to disrupt an orderly, lawful and accurate
compilation of the Florida vote, accuse their victims
of creating chaos.

As mendacious as the body of Bush's speech was, his
peroration achieved new heights - or depths - of cynicism
and deceit. "We have a responsibility to conduct
ourselves with dignity and honor," he declared. This
from a candidate who has employed the basest methods
of conspiracy and fraud to hijack an election, not
hesitating to plot with his brother in the Florida
statehouse and his first cousin, John Ellis, at Fox TV
to disenfranchise voters and stampede public opinion.

"We have a responsibility," he continued, "to make
sure that those who speak for us do not poison our
politics. And we have the responsibility to respect
the law and not seek to undermine it when we do not
like its outcome." This from the head of a campaign
that has employed character assassination and slander
as a central component of its modus operandi, and the
leader of a party that has devoted the past eight
years to a covert campaign of dirty tricks aimed at
humiliating, destabilizing and bringing down an
elected president.

Even as Bush was posing as the defender of the rule of
law, his fellow Texan, House Majority Whip Tom
Delay - who spearheaded the Republican drive to impeach
Bill Clinton - was circulating among Republican
congressmen a proposal for the House and Senate to
reject the electors from Florida, should the vote
there ultimately favor Al Gore.

In a final flourish, Bush declared, "The outcome of
this election will not be the result of deals or
efforts to mold public opinion. The outcome of this
election will be determined by the votes and by law."
A more accurate summation of the position of the Bush
campaign would read: "The outcome of this election
will not be determined by the votes or by law. The
outcome of this election will be determined by
conspiracy, fraud and efforts to pollute public
opinion."

Anyone who retains a sense of the genuine democratic
traditions embodied in the American Revolution and the
Civil War struggle against slavery can only react to
this morass of lies with repugnance. The whole world
knows that Bush's every sentence was laced with
deceit, including those who wrote the speech, the man
who gave it, and the journalists who reported it.

What is the objective significance of such crude and
shameless lying? It is an attempt to conceal the
glaring contrast between pretense and reality, between
the undemocratic and unconstitutional aims of the Bush
campaign and its need to maintain a democratic fa�ade.
The cornerstone of Bush's campaign, after all, was the
slogan of "compassionate conservatism," a mantra
conjured up so the Republican right could adopt a
public posture of moderation and concern, while
preparing to impose the most reactionary social agenda
in modern American history.

The cabal of political operatives, reactionary
lawyers, judges, corporate executives and media
scoundrels lined up behind the Texas governor is
counting on the complacency of the liberal media to
brazen its way to the seizure of the White House. They
are counting as well on the flaccid and demoralized
character of their Democratic opponents, who proceed
as if they were dealing with people who play by the
normal rules of bourgeois politics.

The Democrats proved in the impeachment conspiracy
that they are incapable of conducting a serious
struggle to defend democratic rights against the
extreme right-wing forces that control the Republican
Party. They themselves have lurched to the right, and
sought in every way possible to adapt themselves to
the political elements that articulate more openly and
ruthlessly the demands of the financial and corporate
oligarchy. As in the impeachment crisis, the Democrats
are once again revealing that they fear the emergence
of a movement of social and political struggle from
below more than they fear a victory of the Republican
right.

The journalistic establishment will not speak the
truth, but the World Socialist Web Site will: in the
Bush campaign the American people are confronting the
rise of a gangster element to the summit of the
political establishment. In a capitalist society with
staggering levels of social inequality, a frightened
ruling elite is resorting to criminal methods to hang
onto its wealth and privileges. It increasingly looks
with contempt on the traditional institutions and
methods upon which it has relied in the past, and
turns instead toward authoritarian forms of rule.


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