*** From [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Wilhelm Glowacki)

Na dwie godziny(PST) przed mowa Al Gore'a, rzucajacego recznik na 
ringu(TKO), grupa Demokratow z Florydy, chyba bez zupelnej znajomosci praw 
amerykanskiego, raczyla byla wydac ponizsze:
***
Never say die
With Al Gore poised to concede, some Florida Democrats are urging him to 
fight on.

- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Jake Tapper

Dec. 13, 2000 | WASHINGTON -- Even as the Tallahassee attorneys for Vice 
President Al Gore were dolefully packing away their legal-size manila 
folders and Gore's aides in Washington were reaching for bourbon Wednesday, 
three Democratic members of the U.S. House of Representatives from Florida 
called for Gore to continue to pursue whatever legal avenues remain 
available in his quest for the presidency.

Reps. Alcee Hastings, Peter Deutsch and Carrie Meek made clear that they 
harbor lingering doubts about Bush's legitimacy as president in the wake of 
the divisive battle that apparently ended Gore's chances with a 5-4 Supreme 
Court ruling in Texas Gov. George W. Bush's favor Tuesday night.

"The vice president should not concede and should actually use that opening 
the Supreme Court has given him," Deutsch said in a conference call with 
reporters Wednesday. "There's still time to count the votes." Despite legal 
experts' claims to the contrary, Deutsch insisted, the Supreme Court 
ruling, in remanding the case back to the Florida Supreme Court, left an 
opportunity for the recount to be reordered on constitutional grounds. The 
actual final deadline "is Jan. 6, when Congress accepts the electors," 
Deutsch said.

The three Florida Democrats implied that a cloud covers the prospective 
Bush presidency in the darkness of illegitimacy. First and foremost, they 
slammed the Supreme Court for what they consider to be a partisan ruling 
precluding, according to Meek, "my African-American constituency" from 
having a "chance of having their votes counted." The court's decision 
"reminds me of some terrible, horrible mistakes of the past," she said.

Hastings said that the ruling turned American politics upside-down. "Rather 
than be a place where presidents choose judges, these were judges choosing 
a president."

Deutsch said that his 10-year-old son summed up the perception problem of 
the court Wednesday morning when he said, "It's not fair."

"It looks like a political decision," Deutsch said, calling the ruling 
"maybe [the Supreme Court's] darkest hour ever."

While Hastings, Meek and Deutsch said they would live with a President 
Bush, Hastings called the election a "stain on democracy ... The people are 
going to be left saying, 'I'm not certain this guy won this election.'"

Factor in the various disputes surrounding the Florida election, Hastings 
said, including the butterfly ballot, the failure of various hand recounts 
to be completed, the fact that some ballots were "on an 11th-grade reading 
level" and on and on. After all that, "you tell me that you know that 
George Bush won this election, I will tuck myself under the legitimacy that 
you have just falsified."

"The legitimacy of any president where the votes are left uncounted is 
automatically a consideration," Hastings said. "He'll be the president, and 
if the Middle East explodes tomorrow we will rally around him as we would 
Al Gore."

Still, the wounds from this election may be slow to heal, Meek said, 
particularly among black voters, who are especially wary of the legitimacy 
of Bush's presidency. "Our voters are suspect of the judicial system," Meek 
said. "They feel there's something rotten in Denmark. There have been too 
many circumstances that belied honesty and integrity in this process. They 
don't believe that Gore has been treated fairly. They feel that their votes 
have not been counted."

But beneath the Democrats' strongly worded rhetoric lay a tacit recognition 
that Bush is almost certain to be the president-elect. Since the ruling was 
handed down, high-ranking Democrats like Democratic National Committee 
chairman Ed Rendell, Sen. Bob Torricelli of New Jersey and Sen. Byron 
Dorgan of North Dakota have called on Gore to concede.

But Florida's Democrats are urging Gore to fight on, however contrary such 
a fight may be to legal practicality, public opinion or even the apparent 
decision of Gore and his advisors to concede Wednesday at 9 p.m. EST.

The conference call for reporters was arranged by the DNC, working with the 
Florida Democratic Party. Tony Welch, a spokesman for the Florida 
Democratic Party, acknowledged the gulf between the Gore campaign's 
tempered public remarks and the three representatives' rather strong 
sentiments -- especially those against Bush and the Supreme Court. But the 
three members of Congress really wanted to express their views, Welch said.

"I don't think this thing is over," Deutsch said during the conference 
call. "Just think about every Bruce Willis movie you've ever seen."

"I prefer 'Friday the 13th' and Freddy Krueger from the "Nightmare on Elm 
Street" films, joked Hastings.

But even Bruce Willis movies roll the credits at some point. What about the 
members of the Gore team who are saying that it's all over?

Deutsch referred to them as "the people in Al Gore's office who want to go 
back to being lobbyists" and "don't want to offend a Bush administration" 
because they're "afraid of losing their clients." Deutsch said that he 
knows Gore fairly well and that "I know in his heart I don't think he wants 
to stop."

Hastings noted that Bush's running mate, presumed Vice President-elect Dick 
Cheney, was meeting with moderate Republicans in the Senate Wednesday, and 
suggested that Bush and Cheney get moving on setting up a meeting with the 
Congressional Black Caucus. "We always know we're going to be last on the 
list," Hastings said. "But he had better get started. Because the honeymoon 
is over before it began."
[4:36 PM 12/13/2000]
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W.Glowacki





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