Forward from mart

A bad omen for Bush - A hint of things to come??  
- Fw: [NYTr] Angry about the lost votes of 2000, 
mostly black Florida town has strong turnout


----- Original Message ----- 
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "NYTr List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, November 02, 2004 4:22 PM
Subject: [NYTr] Mostly Black Florida town has 
strong turnout


Via NY Transfer News Collective
 All the News that Doesn't Fit


http://www.turkishpress.com/news.asp?id=32650 

Turkish Press, 
Nov. 2, 2004


AFP - Nov 2, 2004

Angry about the lost votes of 
2000, mostly black Florida town
has strong turnout


RIVIERA BEACH, Florida Nov 2 (AFP) - Anger over the lost votes 
of 2000 is still simmering in this mainly black town of south Florida, 
where voters turned out massively Tuesday, many vowing they 
would not be disenfranchized again.


Residents, standing in long lines to cast their ballots, said renewed
irregularities are only strengthening their resolve to make their votes
count. And many said that vote is against President George W. Bush.


The feeling that Bush stole the last presidential was strong in this city 
of 30,000, where as many of 16 percent of the ballots were discarded 
in the 2000 election, twice as many as the already high statewide 
average.


"We are not going to let this happen again," said John Goldwise, 57. 
"This time we have too many people watching," he said after casting 
his ballot at an elementary school, where partisan poll watchers 
monitored the proceedings.


Outside Riviera Beach's Lindsey Davis community center, a dozen members of the 
non-partisan Election Protection group, among the thousands of lawyers and other 
volunteers deployed to Florida, 
noted down complaints and helped voters who had questions.


A lawyer with the John Kerry campaign also offered assistance, but 
his Republican counterpart stood at a distance, and declined to make 
any comments on his role at the site.


Civil rights groups have accused Republicans of targeting black and Hispanic 
communities for challenges of their voter eligibility.


Several voters complained they had received phone calls or flyers 
directing them to the wrong precincts, and have strong suspicions 
the calls were part of a concerted effort to keep Kerry supporters 
away from the polls.


Michelle Hargrett, 37, pointed to a brightly-colored flyer she said she 
found on her door, urging her to vote for Kerry but sending her to the 
wrong precinct, kilometers (miles) away from the one where she is registered.


"This is a dirty trick," she said. She did not fall for it, but used it 
to teach her 18-year-old daughter a lesson in democracy, and 
reported it to electoral lawyers.


"I told my daughter that even if we had stood for hours in the 
wrong line, we'd have still have made sure we eventually 
voted."


She said she's voted in every election since she turned 18. 
But what happened in the last presidential bid made her 
even more determined.


"I was bitter after the last time, they disenfranchized people 
who look like me," said Hargrett, who is black.


Bush won the White House in 2000 after the US Supreme 
Court halted five weeks of recounts in Florida, leading many 
Democrats to cry foul.


In that election thousands of votes, many from black voters, 
were discarded for reasons ranging from voter eligibility to 
badly perforated ballots.


Confusing ballots had caused elderly Jewish voters to 
mistakenly support a far-right wing candidate widely 
considered anti-semitic.


"My friends in New York still give me of hard time, saying
I voted for Pat Buchanan," said Esther Kinterman, who 
sat on a bench with two elderly friends, after voting at a 
synagogue in West Palm Beach.


Many people in south Florida agree the new touch-screen 
machine is much easier to use than the punch-card system 
it replaced, though some are concerned that the fact it 
doesn't print out ballots would make it impossible to recount 
votes manually in case of disputes over the outcome of 
Tuesday's election.


"Those old machines, I was happy to get rid of them," said 
Sheryll Miller, who said she had no trouble casting her ballot
at the synagogue, located inside a retirement community.

11/02/2004 18:14 GMT - AFP
       
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