-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.onlinejournal.com/Commentary/Conover051101/conover051101.html
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">Florida's "fixed it" farce</A>
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Florida's "fixed it" farce




By Bev Conover


�

May 11, 2001�Okay, Floridians, you can go back to sleep now, because your 
wonderful legislature has "fixed" the elections mess by mandating every 
election precinct have optical scanner voting systems in place by 2002.

It's "fixed" all right, but not in the way you think. Punch cards and chad 
may be out. Ditto for the mechanical lever machines whose gears can be shaved 
to produce a desired result. But optical scanners without controls to assure 
an accurate count are no panacea.

The legislature did nothing to reform the election laws to make it 
unmistakably clear to even an idiot when and how manual recounts are to be 
done, much less require two sets of test ballots�marked and tallied by an 
independent panel in each precinct�be run through the scanners before the 
voting begins and then before the tabulation begins to make sure the scanners 
are correctly counting the votes. The legislature did nothing to reinforce 
its clear standard about who may apply for an absentee ballot. Its only other 
major "fix" was requiring the creation of a statewide voter registration list 
to ostensibly prevent duplicate voting.

Gee, Secretary of State Katherine Harris, whose state term is up in 2003 and 
the office vanishes, announced Wednesday that she will run for Congress in 
2004. In the meantime, she will have carte blanche to purge the voter rolls 
without a drop of input or dissent from any honest county supervisor of 
elections. That's one way to guarantee yourself a seat in Congress, in case 
your heavily Republican district should suddenly turn on you.
Speaking of Harris, there she was alongside a gleeful Governor Jeb Bush 
Wednesday in West Palm Beach for the ceremonial signing of the elections 
bill. Also part of the photo op were Lt. Governor Frank Brogan and Palm Beach 
County Supervisor of Elections Theresa LaPore, who the day before withdrew 
from the Democratic Party and re-registered as an independent.

Both women are interesting studies. While throughout the madness following 
the Nov. 7 election, LaPore was repeatedly portrayed�mainly by Republicans 
who wanted to stop the manual recount�as a loyal, true-blue Democrat, Jake 
Tapper in his book, "Down & Dirty: The Plot to Steal the Presidency," noted 
that LaPore originally was a registered Republican, then in 1979 
re-registered as an independent. "When a third party formally registered as 
'Independent,' she changed her registration to 'no party,'" Tapper said.

When then county Supervisor of Elections Jackie Winchester told LaPore in the 
fall of 1995 that she was retiring, LaPore "registered as a Democrat and ran" 
for the office, according to Tapper. 

So much for a being a loyal anything. But LaPore would have us feel sorry for 
her, because she turned to voting systems manager Tony Enos for help with the 
ballot design (Tapper offers no clues about where Enos was coming from, other 
than he was 36 years old and had worked in the supervisor's office since was 
was 18). And so it came to pass that LaPore and other Democrats with no 
knowledge of the state's election laws approved the infamous "butterfly" 
ballot.

The question remains: Was LaPore just stupid or corrupt? The evidence in 
Tapper's book suggests the former, because, he claims Judge Charles Burton, 
the chairman of the county canvassing board, and the other canvassing board 
members knew diddly about the law and let themselves be snookered into 
obtaining a written opinion on when manual recounts could be done from Harris 
lackey Clay Roberts, the head of the state Division of Elections, unaware 
that any written opinion from either Roberts or his boss, Harris, was 
binding. Tapper even goes so far as to write that Burton may not have even 
known the Division of Elections was part of Harris' office.

One thing that can be said for Harris is that she is not stupid. We shall 
leave it to you to deduce what she is.
Before she took up her task as state chairman of then Texas Governor George 
W. Bush's presidential campaign, in hopes of landing an ambassadorship to 
somewhere or other, Harris was a manipulator extraordinaire.

Harris has the dubious distinction of having run the most expensive campaign 
in Florida's history for a state senate seat, having raised more than a half 
million dollars�$20,600 of which illegally came from Riscorp Insurance 
Company. She later returned the Riscorp money, but that was after she 
defeated freshman Democratic state Senator Jim Boczar in 1994 and, as a 
member of the state Senate Banking and Insurance Committee in 1996, sponsored 
a bill to make it more difficult for out-of-state insurance companies to 
compete with Riscorp for workers' compensation policies.

Said Tapper, "For a newcomer, Harris took to the sleazy ways of Tallahasse 
politics damn quick."

Harris announced in 1998 that she would be a GOP candidate for the office of 
secretary of state, because then Secretary of State Sandra Mortham was slated 
to be Jeb Bush's running mate in his second bid for the governorship.

Then when it came to light that Secretary of State Sandra Mortham had also 
received illegal contributions from Riscorp�a paltry $5,825 in comparison to 
Harris' $20,600�in addition to questions being raised over her expenditures 
of state money on outings that had nothing to do with state business, Jeb 
dropped the idea of putting her on his ticket. And thusly, it came to pass 
that Mortham and Harris went head-to-head in a primary battle to become the 
GOP's candidate for secretary of state.

While five of Riscorp's executive pleaded guilty to felony and misdemeanor 
charges over the illegal 1994 campaign contributions, and the company's 
founder was sentenced to five years in prison, Harris had the audacity to run 
TV commercials attacking Mortham for accepting Riscorp money.

Harris went on to beat Mortham, who ironically strongly supported election 
reform, and her Democratic opponent. This was the same year a constitutional 
amendment calling for the abolition of the office with the end of Harris' 
term was passed.

Election reform was the furthest thing from the new secretary of state's 
mind, with the exception of hiring ChoicePoint to purge the voter rolls of 
"felons." Harris busied herself spending state money on trips to various 
parts of the world to allegedly promote trade with Florida. Harris has spent 
more money and time traveling than the governor.

Pointing out her meteoric rise, Tapper wrote, "Just six years! Most 
politicians take at least a decade to completely sell out the very cause [the 
Ringling Museum of Art, in Harris' case] that compelled them to run for 
office in the first place. But Harris is on a fast track. She wanted to run 
for [U.S.] senate this year, in fact, but Jeb had already decided that Rep. 
Bill McCollum would get the nomination, and he cleared the field accordingly 
and told Harris so."

But none of this came up during Jeb Bush's ceremonial love fest signing, 
which he hopes will lay to rest the late night comedians' jokes about 
Florida. "It's a day to celebrate," Bush said, contending that the move to 
statewide use of optical scanners is "a system that will be the envy of the 
nation."

It will?

Nor was there a mention that in certain precincts in Escambia County, which 
have the wonderful optical scanners, election workers turned off the feature 
that spits back improperly marked ballots to the voters. Why? Because they 
are paying an outrageous 23 cents for each ballot or so they claim. So 
somebody goofed up a ballot. Tough. It's money first or is it?

Then Bush dropped an even more chilling remark, when he said Palm Beach 
County "is one of the counties that is likely to upgrade to a high-tech, 
state-of-the-art touch screen voting system, bypassing the lower-cost optical 
scan system that will be required as a minimum statewide standard," the St. 
Petersburg Times reported.

Touch screen voting, the perfect system for stealing elections and no way to 
prove the thefts.

As we said at the outset, you can go back to sleep, Floridians. The voting 
system is all fixed now. Of course, if you believe that, we have some 
waterfront property in the Sahara we would like to sell you.

But before the rest of you get smug grins on your faces, what happened last 
November and in who knows how many primary and general elections before that, 
goes way beyond Florida. With each passing day more and more Election 2000 
horrors come to light in states across the country.

In fact, rather than castigate Floridians for what went on in the Sunshine 
State, maybe we should thank them for finally bringing attention to the many 
ways we are being deprived of our votes that are so precious to a democratic 
society. If it had been business as usual, without all the other bumblings 
and machinations, the Bushies would have gotten away clean with stealing the 
election for George W. Sadly, you aren't likely to see the perpetrators of 
the crimes brought up on charges, much less marched off to prison.

Perhaps the manner and method by which we cast and count our votes is not an 
exciting subject, but it is crucial if we are truly to have government of, by 
and for the people. But where is the debate? Where is the outcry? Where are 
the people storming their state capitals to demand voting systems that are 
difficult to rig and that leave paper trails so results can be verified? 
Instead, we meekly go along with replacing one system controlled by third 
parties with another controlled by third parties.

When is it going to sink in that if we don't stop the theft of our votes and 
the disenfranchisement of voters, that it won't matter whom we vote for in 
2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, because the powers that be will have predetermined 
the outcome? This is not a Republican or a Democrat or a Green or any other 
party thing. It is theft pure and simple, and it is systematic and has been 
going on for a long time�whether it's engaged in at the local, county or 
state levels or by greasing the palms of the faceless people who control the 
computer codes or diddle with the old mechanical machines.

Alas, the more things change, the more they stay the same.

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