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The US election
Absentee vote cases provide evidence of Republican vote-rigging
in Florida
By Patrick Martin
9 December 2000
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Two Leon County Circuit judges in Tallahassee issued decisions
Friday refusing to throw out thousands of absentee ballots cast
in two Florida counties. The ballots were challenged by local
Democratic Party activists in Seminole County and Martin County
who used legal arguments resembling those employed by the Bush
campaign in its effort to suppress hand recounts in south Florida.
There was no evidence that the absentee ballots themselves
had been tampered with or fixed. A decision to disqualify the
ballots would have violated the democratic rights of over 25,000
people, the majority of whom voted for Republican presidential
candidate George W. Bush. The transparent aim of the plaintiffs,
who included a wealthy lawyer who made large campaign contributions
to the Gore campaign, was to counter the Republican attacks on
the right to vote in south Florida by using similar methods.
While the remedy sought by the Democrats was reactionary, the
court suit placed on the public record considerable and detailed
evidence of the Republican efforts to manipulate and fix the voting
results in Florida. As Gerald Richman, attorney for one of the
Democratic plaintiffs, argued, What we are basically saying
is that there was a conspiracy between representatives of the
Republican Party and an elected Republican official, an elections
supervisor, in terms of how the rules were bent and the rules
were changed to help one party, and one group of people, as opposed
to all of the others.
The facts of the Seminole County case were not in disputeon
the contrary, both sides stipulated to a detailed exposition of
the facts which included sworn deposition testimony from the county
Supervisor of Elections, Sandra Goard. The Republican loyalist
admitted that she had told Democrats that applications for absentee
ballots sent in without voter ID numbers would be disqualified,
while allowing two Republican Party operatives to come into her
offices and work for several weeks filling in missing ID numbers
on applications from Republican voters.
Martin County involved a similar politically motivated deal,
but in this case the defective applications were handed over to
Republican Party officials who took them to a party office, corrected
them by filling in the ID numbers, and then returned them to the
county. A separate lawsuit over similar practices in Bay County
was dismissed on Thursday.
All three cases involve gross violations of a law passed by
the Republican-controlled state legislature in 1998 in the wake
of a ballot-rigging scandal in the Miami mayoral election, when
campaign workers for former mayor Xavier Suarez, a Republican,
were found to have manufactured enough absentee votes to give
him victory in the vote. A judge later threw out all the absentee
votes and declared Suarez's opponent, current mayor Joe Carollo,
the winner.
Richman cited the Miami precedent in urging that all of Seminole
County's absentee ballots be discarded. We believe, under
the law, the only remedy in this case is the entire absentee ballot
pool must be thrown out, he said. We didn't create
the problem; the Republican Party of Florida did, and the supervisor
of elections did.
Under Florida law, only voters, their legal guardians or immediate
family members may request ballot applications or provide information
for them. The two trials confirmed that the election officials
in both counties gave illegal access to ballot applications and
election facilities to local and state Republican Party officials,
to insure the largest possible vote for Bush. At the same time,
election officials all over the state put countless obstacles
in the path of voters thought likely to support Gore and the Democrats,
especially black and other minority voters.
The judges who heard the Seminole County and Martin County
cases gave only a slap on the wrist to the local officials, finding
that irregularities had taken place in the handling
of the absentee ballot applications, but declined to impose the
remedy sought by the plaintiffs on the grounds that it was anti-democratic.
From a political standpoint, the absentee ballot cases showed
the revolting cynicism of the Bush campaign and the Republican
Party, who invoked precisely the same democratic provisions of
the Florida state constitution which they had denounced when the
state Supreme Court ruled in favor of hand recounts in selected
counties last month.
Bush lawyer Matt Staver, arguing the Martin County case, used
the identical language of the Florida Supreme Court, declaring,
The State of Florida, in the very first declaration of rights,
puts down the issue of voting as the preeminent right.... We should
not let this hypertechnicality disenfranchise these voters.
The Bush campaign cannot be consistent on either side of the
issue. If all votes in Florida are to be counted, then Bush loses.
If all Florida election laws are enforced literallydisqualifying
tens of thousands of Bush votes generated by an illegal processthen
Bush loses again. The only way that Bush can win is to demand
the fullest democracy in counting Republican votes, while demanding
exclusion of as many Democratic votes as possible on technical
grounds.
Staver even cited a 1973 amendment to the Voting Rights Act
that explicitly declares that casting an absentee ballot is a
right, not a privilege. He declared, It outrages me, your
honor, to think that voting for president is considered a privilege,
as opposed to a right.
Meanwhile other Bush attorneys were arguing precisely thatthat
there is no right to vote for president, when it comes to inhabitants
of Miami-Dade, Palm Beach and other urban counties. And Republican
state legislators were calling a special session of the Florida
state legislature to deprive the citizens of Florida of any right
to vote in the presidential election, by appointing a Bush slate
of electors regardless of the outcome of the popular vote in this
state.
See Also:
Bush attack on voting rights continues
in arguments before Florida Supreme Court
[8 December 2000]
Republicans to convene Florida legislature
to impose Bush electors
[7 December 2000]
US Elections
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