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http://www.consortiumnews.com/2001/111201a.html

Gore's Victory

By Robert Parry
November 12, 2001


So Al Gore was the choice of Florida's voters -- whether one counts
hanging chads or dimpled chads. That was the core finding of the
eight news organizations that conducted a review of disputed Florida
ballots. By any chad measure, Gore won.

Click for Printable Version

Gore won even if one doesn't count the 15,000-25,000 votes that USA
Today estimated Gore lost because of illegally designed "butterfly
ballots," or the hundreds of predominantly African-American voters
who were falsely identified by the state as felons and turned away
from the polls.

Gore won even if there's no adjustment for George W. Bush's windfall
of about 290 votes from improperly counted military absentee ballots
where lax standards were applied to Republican counties and strict
standards to Democratic ones, a violation of fairness reported
earlier by the Washington Post and the New York Times.

Put differently, George W. Bush was not the choice of Florida's
voters anymore than he was the choice of the American people who cast
a half million more ballots for Gore than Bush nationwide. [For more
details on studies of the election, see  Consortiumnews.com stories
of May 12, June 2 and July 16.]

The Spin

Yet, possibly for reasons of "patriotism" in this time of crisis, the
news organizations that financed the Florida ballot study structured
their stories on the ballot review to indicate that Bush was the
legitimate winner, with headlines such as "Florida Recounts Would
Have Favored Bush" [Washington Post, Nov. 12, 2001].

Post media critic Howard Kurtz took the spin one cycle further with a
story headlined, "George W. Bush, Now More Than Ever," in which Kurtz
ridiculed as "conspiracy theorists" those who thought Gore had won.

"The conspiracy theorists have been out in force, convinced that the
media were covering up the Florida election results to protect
President Bush," Kurtz wrote. "That gets put to rest today, with the
finding by eight news organizations that Bush would have beaten Gore
under both of the recount plans being considered at the time."

Kurtz also mocked those who believed that winning an election fairly,
based on the will of the voters, was important in a democracy. "Now
the question is: How many people still care about the election
deadlock that last fall felt like the story of the century � and now
faintly echoes like some distant Civil War battle?" he wrote.

In other words, the elite media's judgment is in: "Bush won, get over
it." Only "Gore partisans" � as both the Washington Post and the New
York Times called critics of the official Florida election tallies �
would insist on looking at the fine print.

The Actual Findings

While that was the tone of coverage in these leading news outlets,
it's still a bit jarring to go outside the articles and read the
actual results of the statewide review of 175,010 disputed ballots.

"Full Review Favors Gore," the Washington Post said in a box on page
10, showing that under all standards applied to the ballots, Gore
came out on top. The New York Times' graphic revealed the same
outcome.

Earlier, less comprehensive ballot studies by the Miami Herald and
USA Today had found that Bush and Gore split the four categories of
disputed ballots depending on what standard was applied to assessing
the ballots � punched-through chads, hanging chads, etc. Bush won
under two standards and Gore under two standards.

The new, fuller study found that Gore won regardless of which
standard was applied and even when varying county judgments were
factored in. Counting fully punched chads and limited marks on
optical ballots, Gore won by 115 votes. With any dimple or optical
mark, Gore won by 107 votes. With one corner of a chad detached or
any optical mark, Gore won by 60 votes. Applying the standards set by
each county, Gore won by 171 votes.

This core finding of Gore's Florida victory in the unofficial ballot
recount might surprise many readers who skimmed only the headlines
and the top paragraphs of the articles. The headlines and leads
highlighted hypothetical, partial recounts that supposedly favored
Bush.

Buried deeper in the stories or referenced in subheads was the fact
that the new recount determined that Gore was the winner statewide,
even ignoring the "butterfly ballot" and other irregularities that
cost him thousands of ballots.

The news organizations opted for the pro-Bush leads by focusing on
two partial recounts that were proposed � but not completed � in the
chaotic, often ugly environment of last November and December.

The new articles make much of Gore's decision to seek recounts in
only four counties and the Florida Supreme Court's decision to
examine only "undervotes," those rejected by voting machines for
supposedly lacking a presidential vote. A recurring undercurrent in
the articles is that Gore was to blame for his defeat, even if he may
have actually won the election.

"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,'" the New York Times wrote, with a clear
suggestion that Gore was hypocritical as well as foolish.

The Washington Post recalled that Gore "did at one point call on Bush
to join him in asking for a statewide recount" and accepting the
results without further legal challenge, but that Bush rejected the
proposal as "a public relations gesture."

The Bush Strategy

Instead of supporting a full and fair recount, Bush chose to cling to
his official lead of 537 votes out of some 6 million cast, Bush
counted on his brother Jeb's state officials to ensure the Bush
family's return to national power.

To add some muscle to the legal maneuvering, the Bush campaign
dispatched thugs to Florida to intimidate vote counters and jacked up
the decibel level in the powerful conservative media, which accused
Gore of trying to steal the election and labeled him "Sore Loserman."

With Bush rejecting a full recount and media pundits calling for Gore
to concede, Gore opted for recounts in four southern Florida counties
where irregularities seemed greatest. Those recounts were opposed by
Bush's supporters, both inside Gov. Jeb Bush's administration and in
the streets by Republican hooligans flown in from Washington. [For
more details, see stories from Nov. 24, 2000 and Nov. 27, 2000]

Stymied on that recount front, Gore carried the fight to the state
courts, where pro-Bush forces engaged in more delaying tactics,
leaving the Florida Supreme Court only days to fashion a recount
remedy.

Finally, on Dec. 8, facing an imminent deadline for submitting the
presidential election returns, the state Supreme Court ordered a
statewide recount of "undervotes." This tally would have excluded so-
called "overvotes" � which were kicked out for supposedly indicating
two choices for president.

Bush fought this court-ordered recount, too, sending his lawyers to
the U.S. Supreme Court. There, five Republican justices stopped the
recount on Dec. 9 and gave a sympathetic hearing to Bush's claim that
the varying ballot standards in Florida violated constitutional equal-
protection requirements.

At 10 p.m. on Dec. 12, two hours before a deadline to submit voting
results, the Republican-controlled U.S. Supreme Court instructed the
state courts to devise a recount method that would apply equal
standards, a move that would have included all ballots where the
intent of the voter was clear. The hitch was that the U.S. Supreme
Court gave the state only two hours to complete this assignment,
effectively handing Florida's 25 electoral votes and the White House
to Republican George W. Bush.

A Third Hypothetical

The articles about the new recount tallies make much of the two
hypothetical cases in which Bush supposedly would have prevailed: the
limited recounts of the four southern Florida counties � by 225
votes � and the state Supreme Court's order � by 430 votes. Those
hypothetical cases dominated the news stories, while Gore's statewide-
recount victory was played down.

Yet, the newspapers made little or nothing of the fact that the U.S.
Supreme Court's decision represented a third hypothetical. Assuming
that a brief extension were granted to permit a full-and-fair Florida
recount, the U.S. Supreme Court decision might well have resulted in
the same result that the news organizations discovered: a Gore
victory.

The U.S. Supreme Court's proposed standards mirrored the standards
applied in the new recount of the disputed ballots. The Post buries
this important fact in the 22nd paragraph of its story.

"Ironically, it was Bush's lawyers who argued that recounting only
the undervotes violated the constitutional guarantee of equal
protection. And the U.S. Supreme Court, in its Dec. 12 ruling that
ended the dispute, also questioned whether the Florida court should
have limited a statewide recount only to undervotes," the Post
wrote. "Had the high court acted on that, and had there been enough
time left for the Florida Supreme Court to require yet another
statewide recount, Gore's chances would have been dramatically
improved."

In other words, if the U.S. Supreme Court had given the state enough
time to fashion a comprehensive remedy or if Bush had agreed to a
full-and-fair recount earlier, the popular will of the American
voters � both nationally and in Florida � might well have been
respected. Al Gore might well have been inaugurated president of the
United States.

Favored Outcome

But this outcome was not the favored hypothetical of the news
organizations, which apparently wanted to avoid questions about their
patriotism. If they had simply given the American people the
unvarnished facts, the reality that the voters of Florida favored Al
Gore might have bolstered the belief that Bush indeed did steal the
White House. That, in turn, could have undermined his legitimacy
during the current crisis over terrorism.

In its coverage of the latest recount numbers, the national news
media also showed little regard for the fundamental principle of
democracy: that leaders derive their just powers from the consent of
the governed, not from legalistic tricks, physical intimidation and
public-relations maneuvers.

It is that understanding that is most missing in the news accounts of
the latest recount figures.

Presumably, the American people are supposed to accept that
everything just turned out right � the Bush dynasty was restored to
power, the proper order was back in place. Anyone who begs to differ
is a "conspiracy theorist" or a "Gore partisan."


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