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The US election
Bush attack on voting rights continues in arguments before
Florida Supreme Court
By John Andrews
8 December 2000
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The seven-judge Florida Supreme Court on Thursday heard lawyers
for Democratic presidential candidate Al Gore and Republican candidate
George W. Bush argue whether Florida Circuit Court Judge N. Sanders
Sauls properly rejected Gore's contest of the certified election
results, which have given Bush a margin of 537 votes out of some
six million cast statewide.
If the Florida high court allows the ruling to stand, Bush
will become the winner of Florida's 25 electoral votes and therefore
the presidency, unless absentee ballots are disqualified in two
cases still pending in Florida trial courts. Even if the courts
in these absentee ballot cases rule in favor of Gore, which is
considered unlikely, the Bush camp will appeal the decisions to
the Florida Supreme Court and, if need be, to the US high court.
In any event, Gore and other Democratic leaders have strongly
suggested that an unfavorable ruling from the Florida Supreme
Court will be followed by a speedy concession.
At Thursday's hearing before the Florida high court, the candidates'
positions continued on the trajectories established during the
month-long post-election crisis. Gore's lawyers are trying to
get a more complete count of votes cast, while the Bush campaign
wants to suppress thousands of pro-Gore ballots so the Texas governor
can gain the White House, despite having lost the popular vote
both nationally and in Florida.
The main issue before the Florida Supreme Court was Gore's
claim that approximately 14,000 legally cast ballots from Palm
Beach and Miami-Dade counties either have not been counted, or
have been counted but not included in the official statewide tally.
These ballots include those already determined to bear clear presidential
votes from Palm Beacha net gain of 215 for Goreas
well as from Miami-Dadea net gain of 168 for Gore. These
Gore votes were excluded by the secretary of state, Republican
functionary Katherine Harris, because the Palm Beach results were
faxed 90 minutes late and the Miami-Dade recount was only partial,
having been aborted under pressure from a right-wing mob acting
under the direction of the Republican Party.
Gore is also claiming that Nassau County illegally disregarded
its initial machine recountrequired under Florida law because
of the closeness of the electionand reverted to its election
day count, thereby improperly adding 51 votes to Bush's margin.
If one takes into consideration the Gore votes already found
by canvassers in Palm Beach and Miami-Dade, but excluded by Republican
officials from the official state tally, and subtracts from Bush's
official margin the 51 contested votes in Nassau County, the Republican
candidate's margin of victory shrinks to a little more than one
hundred votes.
The uncounted presidential ballots include over three thousand
in Palm Beach that Gore contends show votes for him, but were
improperly rejected by the county election board, and another
9,000 so-called undervotes in Miami-Dade that have
never been counted by man or machine.
The evidence presented at last weekend's trial before Judge
Sauls demonstrated that there are more than sufficient legally
cast ballots in this latter group for Gore's total to surpass
Bush's. Witnesses explained that the crude Vote-O-Matic
punch card ballot devices used in Palm Beach and Miami-Dade counties
result in votes on more than one ballot out of every 10 not registering
during machine counts, and the number increases where the devices
are not properly maintained. Subsequent manual recounts recover
at least one out of every four such undervotes, and in many cases
many more than that. This is precisely what has happened in every
manual count of punch card undervotes in Florida since the election.
In one of the most dramatic moments of the trial before Judge
Sauls, Bush's own expert witness conceded that manual counts are
necessary to tabulate votes in close elections where Vote-O-Matics
are used.
Analysis of the November 7 election data has demonstrated that
the undervotes are concentrated in lower income and minority areas,
where voters have to use cheaper and more dilapidated voting equipment.
Because these areas voted overwhelmingly for Gore over Bush, there
is no question that an objective count of the challenged ballots
will yield more than sufficient legally cast votes to win the
election for Gore.
Nevertheless, in a thoroughly undemocratic ruling, Judge Sauls
rejected the contest, stating that local canvassing boards had
discretion to reject lawfully cast votes, and that
Gore did not show that the uncounted votes would have changed
the outcome of the election. This is the ruling the Florida Supreme
Court reviewed on Thursday.
Last month, the Florida Supreme Court handed down a decision
that Secretary of State Harris had abused her authority by denying
county election boards time to conduct manual recounts. Citing
the importance that the Florida Constitution gives to the
will of the people as expressed in the vote, the court ordered
a nine-day extension of the deadline for certifying the results
of the presidential vote, and declared that Harris would have
to include the results of manual recounts in the official tally.
That decision was vacated Monday by the US Supreme Court in
an astounding decision that suggested state legislatures can appoint
presidential electors without regard to the popular vote of the
people. The US high court in effect warned the Florida court against
taking any action, in the interest of enforcing the right to vote
and insuring a fair count, that could be construed as an infringement
on the powers of the state legislaturein this case dominated
by Republican allies of George Bush and his brother Jeb, who is
the governor of the state.
The impact of the US Supreme Court ruling was obvious from
the first moment of the Florida high court proceedings. Chief
Justice Charles T. Wells began by expressing grave concern that
the US high court ruling deprived the state courts of all jurisdiction
to settle disputes over the selection of presidential electors.
Wells wondered aloud why the lawyers on both sides had not addressed
the precedent on which the US high court had relied, the 1892
decision in McPherson v. Blacker, not only in the earlier
argument before the Florida Supreme Court, but also in the briefs
filed over the last two days in advance of Thursday's hearing.
Gore lawyer David Boies, a skilled business litigator, assured
the Florida Court that it had jurisdiction to review the legal
propriety of Sauls' ruling. Boies explained that the state legislature
had determined that presidential electors were to be selected
through popular vote, and that the Florida Election Code applied.
The state Supreme Court has authority to settle disputes over
the meaning of these laws, just as it does over other state laws,
he asserted.
Boies interjected that these basic legal principles were so
obvious that no one would have questioned them before this
election. He perhaps said more than he intended to.
Boies then addressed Sauls' alleged legal error in refusing
to count the contested ballots, most of which, Boies emphasized,
Gore first asked to be counted on November 9 and have never once
been counted. Boies places special emphasis on the fact that the
contested ballots themselves were in evidence, and that Sauls
refused even to look at them to see whether any contained legal
votes.
Although Boies was clear in arguing that the applicable provisions
of the Florida Election Code require judicial examination of contested
votes in close elections, he skirted the central issue in the
casewhich transcends the immediate outcome of the 2000 election
and goes to the right to vote itself.
In the arguments of Gore's lawyers, both Boies in Florida and
Lawrence Tribe before the US Supreme Court, there has been an
unmistakable reluctance to identify the principal issues before
the courtsnamely the Republicans' attempt to install a president
through the suppression of votes and, along with that, their overt
attack on the most basic tenets of popular sovereignty.
Boies, knowing that Thursday's hearing was nationally televised,
chose to obscure these basic political and constitutional issues,
instead of stating them clearly before the court and also before
the American people.
This avoidance is not simply a matter of legal tactics, but
reflects the unwillingness of the Democrats to directly and openly
fight the Republican power grab. It is the product of the same
general prostration before the Republican right that was so apparent
during the impeachment controversy.
Bush lawyer Barry Richard followed Boies. Chief Justice Wells
repeated his concern that Monday's US Supreme Court action might
deprive the Florida courts of jurisdiction. In what was one of
the more surprising aspects of the argument, Richard equivocated
on his support for the more far-reaching implications of the US
high court position. That profoundly anti-democratic posture,
first advanced by ultra-right Justice Antonin Scalia at the December
1 hearing before the US Court, centers on the claim that the Florida
legislature, rather than the voters of Florida, ultimately holds
the power over the selection of presidential electors.
Richard made his central contention that the contested votes
should not be counted because Judge Sauls' determination that
they would not affect the outcome of the election cannot be disturbed
on appeal. Richard's claim that there was absolutely no contrary
evidence, like Judge Sauls' ruling, defies not only facts and
statistics, but common sense. That Bush is fighting so hard to
prevent a full and accurate count in Florida demonstrates that
he knows full well that these votes, if counted, would change
the results in his opponent's favor.
Richard also argued that Judge Sauls was correct in his legal
conclusion that the individual county election boards have discretion
whether to count certain votes or not. This position gives partisan
local officials the green light to discard ballots cast against
the candidates they favor. In fact, Florida law provides for no
such leeway: every legally cast ballot on which voter intent
can be determined must be counted toward the total.
Moreover, the local discretion argument contradicts
another Bush legal contentionthat the so-called selective
recounts Gore is seeking in heavily Democratic areas will
unfairly dilute the votes cast in Republican parts
of the state where recounts are not taking place. Based on this
supposed concern for the rights of Florida voters, Richard argued
that if a court counts the 14,000 ballots Gore is contestinga
task which could easily be accomplished over the weekendall
six million ballots in the state must be recounted. The latter
proposal is highly impractical because Florida's results must
be finalized by December 12.
Richard, no doubt emboldened by the US Supreme Court decision
to vacate last month's Florida high court ruling, adopted a posture
of barely disguised contempt for the Florida justices. The substance
of his argument was contemptuous and dismissive of the democratic
right of Floridians to vote and to have their votes counted. He
brought to mind the adage that what matters most in an election
is not who votes, but who counts the votes. Clearly, Richard had
in mind that any action the Florida Supreme Court might take adverse
to Bush would be quickly trumped by the pro-Republican state legislature,
which is prepared to select its own slate of Bush electors on
Friday, as well as by the US Supreme Court.
See Also:
Republicans to convene Florida legislature
to impose Bush electors
[7 December 2000]
Court rulings in US election crisis attack
democratic rights
[5 December 2000]
Precinct voting studies suggest sizable
Gore victory margin in Florida
[4 December 2000]
US Elections
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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