Who
Counts in Ohio?
b y Steve Weissman
11
November 2004
Is Team Bush
stealing the presidential election in Ohio? And, if it is, can the rest
of us do anything to save our embattled democracy?
For those watching
American TV or reading the dailies, and nothing more, my questions probably
sound loopy, straight from the conspiracy theorists I so often criticize.
For those surfing the Internet or scanning this week's flood of round-robin
emails, the questions point to one of history's great crimes. The truth,
as far as I can see it, falls betwixt, between, and beyond.
Nearly three
months ago, I predicted that the Bush campaigners would, in fact, try
to steal the election. They would, I argued, do it the old-fashioned
American way - with "a massive effort to keep as many as three
million pro-Democratic Afro-Americans, Native Americans, and non-Cuban
Hispanics from voting."
Nowhere did
the GOP try harder to keep minorities from voting - or having their
votes counted - than in Ohio, as I'll show in a moment. Just hold in
mind that, barring unexpected defections, Ohio's 20 electoral votes
will prove decisive on December 13 when the Electoral College meets
in the various state capitols to cast their ballots. If the present
tally holds, Kerry and Edwards will get 252 votes against 286 for Bush
and Cheney. Were the Buckeye State to switch from red to blue, Kerry-Edwards
would win 272 to 266. As Ohio goes, so goes the nation.
Could Ohio still
change its vote?
Yes, it could,
but don't bet on it. The Kerry-Edwards campaign, the White House, and
the major media have already awarded victory to Bush and Cheney, taking
the public spotlight off Ohio election officials. But, as with so much
else in our Rube Goldberg version of democracy, wiggle room remains.
Concession speeches, no matter how moving, can be retracted, which -
to quote a colleague - would be the mother of all flip-flops. Nor, unless
I missed something, do claims of victory from Karl Rove or Peter Jennings
have the force of law.
The news, then,
is that Ohio is still counting. According to Secretary of State J. Kenneth
Blackwell, the chief election official, Bush presently leads Kerry by
136,483 votes. This includes domestic absentee ballots and those from
civilians abroad, but not from overseas military, which will keep coming
in until Friday, November 12.
Bush's lead
will likely become smaller as Secretary Blackwell and bi-partisan County
Election Boards sort out errors in the election night result. Most famously,
Franklin County - which includes Columbus, the state capital - has reported
a malfunction on a touch-screen voting system in one precinct. According
to officials, the precinct gave Mr. Bush nearly 4,000 votes than he
actually received. All of Ohio's 88 counties have reportedly been asked
to look for similar cock-ups.
Against Bush's
136,483-vote lead, officials have in hand nearly 250,000 uncounted ballots.
Some 155,428 are provisional ballots, where voters were initially challenged
or other problems came up. Another 93,000 are "spoiled ballots,"
which - according to officials - showed either no vote for president
or votes for more than one candidate. These are paper punch cards like
the ones with the hanging, dimpled, and pregnant chads that in Election
2000 made my home state of Florida a national laughing stock.
Most pundits
agree that Ohio's spoiled and provisional ballots came overwhelmingly
from Democratic, heavily African-American precincts, while the far smaller
number of overseas military ballots will likely break toward Bush.
The election
boards are currently verifying the eligibility of voters throughout
the state who cast provisional ballots. This Saturday, November 13,
the boards should begin to count those from voters they deem legitimately
registered. In past elections, officials have disqualified some 10%
of provisional ballots, which would reduce the number to just under
140,000.
We should know
by Saturday how many provisional ballots officials have accepted and
how many overseas military ballots they have received.
To trigger an
automatic recount, which would reconsider the "spoiled ballots,"
Kerry needs to reduce Bush's lead to some 19,000 votes, according to
Democratic Party officials. Given the current tally, this would require
winning over 90% of 140,000 qualified provisional ballots, and half
of the overseas military absentees, or a comparable mix. Not likely,
even to a Red Sox fan.
Otherwise, the
Kerry camp would have to request a recount, which they will not do unless
the provisional votes reduce Bush's lead sufficiently to make the "spoiled
ballots" look irresistible.
To make Kerry's
odds even tougher, the man running the game - Secretary of State Ken
Blackwell -also co-chairs the Ohio committee to re-elect George Bush.
A former mayor of Cincinnati, Undersecretary of HUD, and U.S. Ambassador
to the United Nations Human Rights Commission, Blackwell is one of the
national GOP's most prominent African-American officials and a leading
candidate to replace Bob Taft as Governor of Ohio. More to the point,
he publicly spearheaded Republican efforts in the state to reduce the
number of his fellow African-Americans whose votes would go to the Democrats
In some cases,
the courts over-ruled him, and - much to their credit - most black voters
stood up his harassing tactics. But Blackwell never stopped trying.
As chief election
officer, he decreed that voters, if challenged, could cast provisional
ballots only at their correct precinct. Previously, they could vote
anywhere in the county in which they were registered. When a lower court
over-ruled him, he appealed the decision and got his restriction reinstated.
This might, in part, explain why Ohio now has some 100,000 fewer provisional
ballots than many Democrats expected.
Less successfully,
Blackwell tried to enforce an outdated rule that polling stations could
recognize voter registrations only if printed on heavy bond paper, even
though local election boards had officially approved lighter-weigh forms.
Had the courts not stopped him, this would have kept thousands of newly
registered Democrats from voting.
Similarly, Blackwell
refused a request from the National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People (NAACP) to inform former felons that, according to
Ohio law, they had every right to vote.
He presided
over efforts to send massive numbers of poll-watchers into predominantly
African-American precincts to challenge prospective voters. Again a
Federal Court curtailed the effort, which looked calculated to slow
down the process so much that prospective voters would turn away in
frustration.
He failed to
provide African-American precincts with sufficient voting machines,
which added to the incredibly long lines waiting to voting. Many people
stood for hours, and no one knows how many walked away.
Finally, he
made the decision to keep the punch card voting, which everyone in America
knew deprived people - most often minorities - of their right to vote.
Now the fox
guarding the hen house, Ken Blackwell presides over his own sordid success.
http://www.truthout.org/docs_04/111104A.shtml
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