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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : US
Elections
Something rotten in the state of Florida
By David Walsh
9 November 2000
Use
this version to print
While the official recount of the 6 million votes cast in Florida
November 7 continues until at least the end of business Thursday,
sufficient facts have emerged to suggest vote fraud in the state
and raise the possibility of a stolen election. The combination
of misplaced votes, ballot box irregularities, possible voter
intimidation and Republican control of the state government apparatus
add up to a confused and highly suspicious situation.
With only 1,800 votes separating the Democratic and Republican
candidates out of a total of 6 million cast, and the national
election hanging in the balance, the Florida vote and the circumstances
surrounding it have taken on historic significance.
Gore or Buchanan?
Complaints began to flow in from Palm Beach County in southern
Florida as soon as the polls opened Tuesday morning. Voters complained
that the organization of the ballot had confused them. The ten
presidential candidates, including independents, were listed in
two columns. Gore's name was the second one on the left side of
the ballot with an arrow pointing to the third hole in the column.
Voters, many of them elderly, were worried that they might have
voted by mistake for Reform Party candidate Pat Buchanan, whose
name was on the opposite side of the page, with an arrow pointing
to the second hole.
The supervisor of elections for the county, a Democrat, said
any confusion was unintentional. Nonetheless, voters continued
to call Democratic Party headquarters all day. This is ridiculous,
this ballot. We have senior citizens going crazy, said state
Rep. Lois Frankel, a Democrat from West Palm Beach. She arrived
at the county elections office about 3 p.m. to register a protest.
She was joined by state Sen. Ron Klein, Democrat of Boca Raton,
and Democratic Congressman Robert Wexler, also of Boca Raton.
Wexler told reporters, If me and Pat Buchanan are winning
precincts in my district, there is something wrong. Frankel
commented, This has national implications.
Republican officials played down the ballot confusion. Director
of the state division of elections Clay Roberts commented, There's
nothing wrong with the ballots in Palm Beach County. The ballot
is laid out according to state law and the voting system they
have.
But the fact remains that Buchanan, an extreme right-winger,
received 3,407 votes in Palm Beach, while he won a mere 786 in
neighboring Broward County and 561 in Miami-Dade County. His next
highest total was 1,000 in Pinellas County. According to the Palm
Beach Post, Buchanan was credited with 54 [votes] from
the Democratic retiree stronghold of Century Village in West Palm
Beach and 37 from Kings Point in Delray Beach, another haven of
older Democrats. Palm Beach County Commissioner Bert Aronson
remarked, I don't think we have 3,000 Nazis in Palm Beach
County.
Missing ballot boxes
Reports of missing ballot boxes in Broward County, in southern
Florida, surfaced Wednesday. NBC News reported that nine boxes
had gone missing. Jane Carroll, Broward's election supervisor,
responded angrily. She said nothing was missing. Rather, there
were 14 boxes of ballots from the Pembroke Pines area that had
taken longer to relay because of the heavy turnout. She conceded
that one box had been mistakenly left at a Pompano Beach polling
station. We can't prevent human mistakes, she said.
Officials of both the Democratic and Republican parties reported
that dozens, perhaps thousands, of people had been turned away
from the polls. Mitch Caesar of the Broward Democratic Party said
his staff had received calls all day from people turned away,
and that some precincts ran out of ballots and were unable to
obtain more. Thousands may have been disenfranchised in
Broward County today, he said.
Several ballot boxes were reportedly found Wednesday morning
at three elementary schools and a gated community in Palm Beach
County. One box was found at Nothboro elementary school in West
Palm Beach. Another locked ballot box was found at Duncan Middle
School and a third at Timber Trace Elementary School. Police investigating
said they found no ballots in any of the boxes. Officials said
the boxes had been left behind mistakenly or had been used for
other purposes.
Monte Friedkin, of the local Democratic Party, told a local
television station that there were two more boxes found at the
Broken Sound gated community in Boca Raton. Friedkin indicated
that the Democrats' lawyer would be filing suit in the state capital
because of problems with the election.
A ballot box was also found in a Miami church by a church preschool
employee. Miami-Dade County officials said the box was a supply
case, and was not stuffed with forgotten ballots. We have
accounted for all voted and un-voted ballots, said John
Clouse, supervisor of elections for the county. The pastor of
the church, Nebel Buchanan, remained skeptical. About the possibility
of additional ballots to those counted, he said, It's a
very interesting scenario. Buchanan described his congregation
to CNN as being largely African-American and West Indian, and
heavily Democratic. Indeed, the vast majority of the reports of
irregularities have come from Democratic areas.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson told the press that he was preparing
to travel from Nashville to Florida to hold a rally in North Miami
to protest against irregularities in the presidential vote count.
It's not just recount, it's about investigation, Jackson
commented. He indicated that the missing ballot boxes and voter
intimidation kept some minority members from voting, and
some others who did vote were not counted.
People whose votes have not been counted need to have
their votes counted and their voices heard, Jackson said.
He cautioned against a rush to judgment in Florida. There
is no time limit on justice. The media talks about this like it's
a horse race, but this isn't just about Gore and his staff and
Bush and his staff. It's about the American people.
Odd goings-on in the Bush camp
Another factor in the situation likely to arouse questions
is the chain of events Tuesday night involving the television
networks' call of the Florida election and the reaction of the
Bush camp.
After the polls closed at 7 p.m. the networks initially reported
that the Florida balloting was too close to call. An hour later
they were predicting a Gore victory in that state, as well as
in Michigan. At that point, Bush and his family abruptly changed
their original plan, to watch the returns from a suite at the
Four Seasons Hotel, and chose instead to run for the cover
of the governor's mansion, according to Salon magazine.
There appeared to be panic in the camp of Texas Gov. George
W. Bush.... As preparations are made to bus the small pool of
reporters and cameramen assigned to cover the governor over to
the mansion, news comes via cellphone that one of the networks
is about to call Pennsylvania for Vice President Al Gore, filling
the last third of the Florida, Michigan and Pennsylvania trifecta
that is essential to any Gore victory. He's in retreat,
he's running home,' a senior Democratic official says by phone.
Shortly before 10 p.m. Bush invited reporters and television
cameras into the governor's mansion, in an unprecedented move,
to protest against the television networks' call in Florida and
Pennsylvania. He indicated that he had spoken to Pennsylvania's
Gov. Tom Ridge who had assured him that the election was far from
over in that state. Bush said nothing about calls to or from Florida.
The governor told the press, I know you had all those projections,
but people are still counting votes. I'm going to wait until they
count all the votes. I think Americans ought to wait until they
count all the votes.
Moments later CNN withdrew its prediction of a Gore victory
in Florida, eliciting a large cheer from the crowd of Bush supporters
outside the Texas capitol. A short time later ABC, NBC and CBS
followed suit, moving the Florida vote into the too close
to call category. The networks never changed their call
on the Pennsylvania vote, which turned out not to be close.
It would be interesting to know what Bush learned about the
Florida situation between 8 and 10 p.m. Had he found out something
that convinced him that victory in that state was more likely
than it seemed? This is a matter worth pursuing.
At 2:18 a.m. Wednesday morning the television networks declared
Bush the victor in Florida, and Al Gore was on the phone by 2:30
to congratulate the Texas governor. The vice president was preparing
to make a public concession speech about an hour later when television
newscasts indicated he was only trailing Bush by a few hundred
votes, not the 50,000 reported earlier. Instead Gore made a second
call to Bush withdrawing his concession. Circumstances have
changed, he reportedly told his opponent. Do what
you have to do, Bush responded.
The unprecedented and bizarre character of the Florida vote
raises troubling questions. There is no reason to believe that
the crowd of right-wing extremists who, in the impeachment conspiracy
against Clinton, mounted a complicated operation to remove a twice-elected
president would shy away from rigging an election in the state
of Florida, presided over by Jeb Bush, the presidential candidate's
brother. This would not be the first time in American history
that an election had been fixed.
Several things about Florida are worth noting. Its public officials
have the reputation for being among the most corrupt in the country.
Earlier this year the press noted that four former Florida legislators
were facing, serving or appealing federal prison sentences, including
the former Speaker of the House.
The state has also been a longtime center of the drug trade
and right-wing political conspiracies, much of the latter centering
on the Cuban exile community90 percent of whom voted for
Bush in Tuesday's election. The Cuban rightists have a particular
score to settle with the Clinton-Gore administration: the decision
to remove Elian Gonzales, the Cuban child found at sea, from his
Miami relatives and return him to Cuba. A comment from the extreme-right
Judicial Watch, one of the groups that has played a vanguard role
in the anti-Clinton witch-hunt over the past half a dozen years,
is worth noting in this context. It reads: If George W.
Bush wins Floridaas the pundits expectand this captures
the Presidency, he will, ironically, owe his victory to Elian
Gonzalez.
The vote totals for the US Senate and presidential races in
Florida are intriguing. At last count Bill Nelson, Democratic
candidate for the Senate and victor in the race, had 2,981,667
votes. His opponent, former House impeachment manager Rep. Bill
McCollum, had 2,698, 770a difference of 280,000 votes. Gore
received 2,907,351 votes. The difference between Gore's total
and Nelson's is explained by the vote for Green Party candidate
Ralph Nader, approximately 96,000. It is odd, however, that George
W. Bush collected 2,909,135 votes, 200,000 more than McCollum,
with whom he campaigned. Were there that many Republican voters
who made a distinction between the presidential candidate and
the impeachment manager?
Representatives of both the Democratic and Republican parties
have flown to Florida to observe the final canvass. Former Secretary
of State Warren Christopher heads the Democratic team, former
Secretary of State James Baker the Republican camp. The Democrats
have also dispatched a trio of lawyers, including party counsel
Joe Sandler, to Florida. The outcome could depend on several thousand
overseas absentee ballots, many of them from military personnel.
The ballots have until November 17 to arrive at local election
offices in Florida. Fifty-four percent of such ballots were cast
for the Republicans in 1996. Gore spokesman Mark Fabiani, speaking
on CNN, commented: It's all in the hands of whoever counts
the votes in Florida.
If George W. Bush is declared the victor in Florida, he will
be the next US president. If he has not only lost the national
popular vote, but gained office on the basis of a suspicious triumph
in Florida, his administration will be that much more delegitimized
in the eyes of the American people.
See Also:
The 2000 US election results: the
constitutional crisis deepens
[9 November 2000]
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