December
18, 2004
The Sound of Stealing
By
Richard
Baehr
The
late Chicago columnist Mike Royko often told a story about
election night 1960 in Illinois, and the Presidential contest
between then-Massachusetts Senator John F. Kennedy and Vice
President Richard Nixon. As Kennedy’s lead over Nixon in
Illinois kept falling through the night, Robert (Bobby)
Kennedy, the Senator’s campaign manager, nervously kept
calling then-Chicago Mayor Richard Daley, the father of
the current Mayor Daley, to get an update on the race. Daley
kept assuring Bobby that there was nothing to worry about.
Illinois would come through in the end for his brother.
Kennedy continued to remain one state short of victory in
the Electoral College as night turned into day at the Kennedy
compound in Hyannisport, Massachusetts. Bobby’s growing
nervousness finally caused him to blow up at Daley and demand
an explanation as to why the Mayor could be so sure of eventual
victory in the state. Daley told Bobby that he was “holding
out” some precincts in the city, to which Bobby replied:
“How do you know they will be enough?” Daley replied: “I
assure you they will be enough”.
One
might have hoped that 44 years on, we would have evolved
into a somewhat more transparent and legitimate way of deciding
elections, particularly close ones.
Unfortunately,
the events unfolding in Washington State the past few weeks
in the very tightly contested race for Governor, suggest
the Daley approach to politics is still being practiced.
When your candidate (in this case, the Democratic candidate
Christine Gregoire) appears to be coming up short, the Party
works to find some “missing” votes. When they are still
short at the end of the count, they have a recount, and
find some more that need to be counted. When that still
fails to put their candidate over the top, they demand and
pay for a statewide hand recount, and “find” some more.
The process, as in Florida in the 2000 Presidential race,
is to keep counting and finding votes until your candidate
eventually takes the lead. Then you stop counting. In Washington
State in 2004, Democrats in King County are behaving like
Chicago Democrats in 1960, and Broward, Dade and Palm Beach
County Democrats in 2000.
In
Florida in 2000, Vice President Al Gore never took the lead.
He trailed on election night. He was still behind after
the mandatory statewide recount. He was behind after overseas
ballots were added, and he still trailed after the hand
recounts of selected heavily Democratic counties were added
to the vote totals. And as all the studies undertaken in
2001 by the major newspapers and television networks showed,
had the entire statewide recount ordered by the Florida
Supreme Court not been halted by the US Supreme Court, Gore
still would have finished behind Bush in Florida in the
end.
Something
similar has been going on in Washington State. The Republican
candidate for Governor, Dino Rossi, held a lead of a few
thousand votes near the end of the counting of the state’s
almost two million absentee ballots (70% of Washington’s
votes are cast this way). Then, in heavily Democratic King
County, officials “discovered” 10,000 additional absentee
ballots they had not originally included in the number remaining
to be counted. In addition, a Judge ordered the County to
allow Democratic Party officials to obtain the names and
addresses of 929 people whose ballots were classified as
provisional because of mismatched or missing signatures,
so as to facilitate the inclusion of these votes. This resulted
in a rather unorthodox invasion of privacy: Democratic officials
contacted these 929 individuals to ask whom they had voted
for in the Governor’s race. If they answered Gregoire, they
were then shuttled to the county office to clear up their
signature problem. This vote-mining technique added a net
400 votes for Gregoire. The 10,000 extra King County ballots
added another 2,000 net votes for Gregoire. As a result
of this final Gregoire surge from King County, Rossi’s lead
was cut to a scant 261 votes, of about 2.9 million cast.
Then
the state began a required mandatory machine recount statewide.
But King County officials decided to also hand recount 700
previously “uncounted” ballots for Governor. These ballots
were uncounted only in the sense that they had been put
through the machine, and the machine had not detected any
vote for Governor on them. In Florida terminology from the
2000 race, these were “undervotes”. The County officials
went hunting for chads and found enough to net Gregoire
an additional 245 votes. When added to small changes in
the machine recount in other counties, Rossi’s lead slipped
to just 42 votes. John Fund, the author of a new book, Stealing
Elections: How Vote Fraud Threatens Our Democracy, wrote
a column with a play-by-play on the Washington Governor’s
race that carried the story up to the conclusion of the
first recount.
The
state Democratic Party then paid for a statewide hand recount
of the ballots that had already been machine counted twice.
The machinations of this hand recount are described every
day in the brilliant group blog SoundPolitics.com. As Rossi’s
statewide lead crept up to over a 120 votes as eastern Washington
and more rural counties recounted their votes, desperate
Democratic officials in King County reached back into their
bag for one more cache of votes. This time they discovered
573 uncounted absentee votes with missing or inconsistent
signatures. They found another 22 hidden near some box in
an office. (As Dave Barry would say, I am not making this
up).
“20
absentee and two provisional—found in several polling places
in the side bins of plastic base units in which polling
machines sit,” said Bill Huennekens, county election superintendent.
All ballots are supposed to be logged on Election Night
and returned in a sealed bag to election headquarters, but
it didn’t happen with these, he said”
The
595 missing votes come from precincts within King County
that voted heavily Democratic. Assuming these 573 or 595
votes break as other votes did in these precincts it might
enable Gregoire to overtake Rossi statewide.
Election
officials in King County voted 2 to 1 to count the newly
discovered votes. Two of the three members of the King County
canvassing board are Democrats. So County officials keep
finding new votes in the heavily Democratic County, and
the canvassing board keeps voting to count them. Some of
you may recall all the times during the 2000 hand recount
in Broward County, when the two Democrats found a Gore vote,
and the third member of the panel, the only Republican,
could not discern one. Al Gore netted 567 net votes from
the Broward under-vote mining operation, enough to cut Bush's
statewide lead in half.
We
may know in a week or so if Democrats have found enough
votes this time to get Gregoire into the lead. If this happens,
the Democrats will then profess exhaustion with this long
process, and ask all Washingtonians to join hands, sing
Kumbaya, and accept the results as the will of the people
finally being done. But in a state that has been trending
Democratic - Kerry beat Bush by 7%, and both US Senators
and 6 of 9 US House members are Democrats - the raw and
heavy-handed search for votes in King County to elect Gregoire
seems to be putting-off even some Democrats. A large majority
of Washington residents indicated in a survey last week
that they were uncomfortable with the continued recounts,
and accepted the election of Rossi after the first recount
was concluded.
But
power, and jobs and money are at stake in a Governor’s election.
The Democrats will not fold up their tents simply because
a majority of voters would prefer clean elections.
Richard
Baehr writes for The
American Thinker.
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