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Time for change

(13,714 posts)
Fri Jun 22, 2012, 08:02 PM Jun 2012

The Stealing of the 2000 Presidential Election

I'm currently working with a publisher, Biting Duck Press, to publish a book (title as yet undetermined) on the corruption in our election system. We intend to have it published prior to the November election, and hope that it will help to make Americans more vigilant and concerned about the way our elections are run. I’ve drafted most of the book. I am currently intending to post large portions of it on DU, in the hope of stimulating discussion and obtaining useful feedback. I’ll start with a portion of the first chapter:


THE STEALING OF THE 2000 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION

Going into Election Day 2000, the Presidential election between Al Gore and George W. Bush was judged to be very close. Three battleground states with early closing times – Florida, Pennsylvania, and Michigan – were polling very close and held the key to victory. Pundits had been saying that if either candidate won all three of them, that would be the ball game.


Election Day 2000

Florida initially looked very promising for Gore. Turnout appeared to be very high, especially in African-American and other Democratic areas. Florida was called for Gore early in the evening, beginning at 7:52 p.m., less than an hour after their polls closed. Then the Pennsylvania polls closed, and the election there was said to be too close to call. Shortly after that, the Michigan polls closed and Michigan was immediately called for Gore. An hour or so later, Pennsylvania was called for Gore. With the polls yet to close in the western states, the election appeared to be virtually over, with a victory for Gore.

But then, in a very rare reversal of a network call, starting at 10:13 p.m., the networks took Florida out of the Gore column and called it “too close to call”. Not long after that, it became evident that the winner of Florida would win the election. Then, at 2:16 a.m. Wednesday morning, the networks began calling Florida for Bush. At 2:30 a.m. Gore phoned Bush to concede Florida and the national election. It was at that point that I went to bed.

At about 3:30 a.m. my wife woke me up to tell me that Florida – and with that the whole election – had been put back in the undecided column. I didn’t believe her. The professionals surely wouldn’t reverse their call on the same state twice in the same election! I went back to sleep.

I woke up later that morning to go to work, looked at the TV, and noticed that Florida was now colored white instead of red on the electoral map. What the hell was going on? I listened to the news reports and discovered that Bush was still ahead in the election by 1,784 votes – about three hundredths of a percent lead. Because of the narrowness of the Bush lead, an automatic recount was proceeding, as required by Florida law. That recount, conducted by the same machines that produced the original vote count with Bush up by about 1,784 votes, ended on Friday, November 10, with Bush leading by about 327 votes according to the Associated Press, with all counties having reported their results. By that time, Gore had already requested a full hand recount of four Democratic counties.


Why couldn’t the TV networks get it right?

The TV networks explained their two bad calls (calling Florida for Gore, reversing that, calling it for Bush, and then reversing that too) with the simple phrase, “bad data”. In other words, they hardly explained it at all. But a consideration of those two bad calls – for Gore, and then for Bush – is very important in providing an understanding of what went wrong in this election. Similarly, it is also very important to understand why the automatic machine recount reduced the Bush margin of victory by about 80%.

First bad call – The butterfly ballot and exit polls deviating from the official vote count
First, let’s consider the first bad call – for Gore. Why was Florida called for Gore so early? The fact is that early election predictions and calls are based on a combination of exit polls and official vote counts. Exit polls measure who the voters think they voted for. Normally voters know who they voted for. But in Palm Beach County, Florida, in 2000, a “butterfly ballot” was used for voting for President. The butterfly ballot was very confusing, as Al Gore’s name was listed next to two third party candidates – Patrick Buchanan and Socialist candidate David McReynolds – on the adjacent page, making it difficult to tell which hole punches corresponded to which candidate. This undoubtedly caused many voters who intended to vote for Gore to vote for either Buchanan or McReynolds or one of those candidates plus Gore – in which case the ballot would be rejected as an “over-vote”. As noted in “The Miami Herald Report: Democracy Held Hostage”, page 15:

The controversial, confusing butterfly ballot in Palm Beach County siphoned many additional votes from Gore. Does anyone really believe that the largely Jewish or black populations of that county intended to vote for conservative Reform Party candidate Pat Buchanan at rates far higher than the rest of the state? … “I came out of the ballot box totally confused,” said Lillian Gaines, sixty-seven, of West Palm Beach, one of hundreds of people in Palm Beach County who complained they were led astray by the poorly designed punch-card ballot…”

Even the far right wing fringe candidate Patrick Buchanan acknowledged as much, noting that of the 3,407 votes he received in Palm Beach County, only about ten percent of them were meant for him. “The rest, I’m quite sure, were Gore votes”, he said.

Another line of evidence that supports the idea that Gore lost large numbers of votes due to ballot confusion is the fact that thousands of ballots were rejected as over-votes because they contained votes for more than one candidate. This could have happened when a voter felt that s/he had mistakenly voted for one candidate, so attempted to correct the error by voting for the originally intended candidate. With the Palm Beach County butterfly ballot, there were 5,352 over-vote ballots marked for both Gore and Buchanan, in contrast to only 1,676 marked for both Bush and Buchanan (Another 2,864 voters voted for both Gore and McReynolds). All of these ballots were rejected in the final vote count. Making the logical assumption that the vast majority of Gore/Buchanan ballots were meant for Gore and the vast majority of Bush/Buchanan ballots were meant for Bush, Gore would have netted at least 1,500 additional votes in Palm Beach County had these voters voted as intended.

Finally, the most direct evidence of who the voter intended to vote for when an over-vote was produced would be the writing in of a candidate’s name at the bottom of the ballot. Voters wrote in Gore’s name on 2,182 over-votes, while they wrote in Bush’s name on 1,309 over-votes. Many of these ballots involved two votes for Gore – one next to his name and the other for the write-in candidate, where Gore’s name was added by the voter. All of these ballots were excluded from the vote count. Had these ballots on which the intent of the voter was clearly indicated been counted, Gore would have picked up 873 additional net votes, far more than he needed to win the election.

The bottom line of all this discussion with regard to the question of why the election in Florida was initially called for Gore is that many thousands of voters who thought they were voting for Gore actually voted for Buchanan or Reynolds or produced over-votes that were excluded. These voters would have responded to exit polls by saying they were voting for Gore – hence the initial call for Gore. But as the official vote count became more and more complete, the exit polls became irrelevant to predicting the official election results. That is when the call for Gore was reversed. In other words, the “bad data” was the result of voters who intended to vote for Gore and thought they had voted for Gore, but whose vote, whether or not they wrote Gore’s name on the ballot, was never counted for Gore.

Second bad call – due to an electronic “glitch”
The basis of the second bad call, which caused the networks to make the call for Bush as having won both Florida and the national election, at 2:16 a.m. on Wednesday, November 8, can be explained by the following report:

Deland, FL, Nov. 11 -- Something very strange happened on election night to Deborah Tannenbaum, a Democratic Party official in Volusia County. At 10 p.m., she called the county elections department and learned that Al Gore was leading George W. Bush 83,000 votes to 62,000. But when she checked the county's Web site for an update half an hour later, she found a startling development: Gore's count had dropped by 16,000 votes, while an obscure Socialist candidate had picked up 10,000 – all because of a single precinct with only 600 voters.

At 2:09 a.m. Volusia County’s erroneous numbers were added to Voter News Service’s tabulations, and less than ten minutes later Florida and the U.S. election were called for Bush. The error in Volusia County had cost Gore (temporarily) 16,021 votes. Another computer error in Brevard County reduced Gore’s vote total by another 4,000 votes.

After the call was made for Bush, as Jeffrey Toobin writes in his book, "Too Close to Call: The Thirty-Six Day Battle to Decide the 2000 election":

Unwilling to take the television networks reports at face value, one of Gore’s campaign staffers did a little investigating and discovered that the networks erred in stating that 50,000 votes from Volusia county were cast for Bush. Turns out that Gore was ahead by 13,000 votes in Volusia and trailing Bush by 6,000 votes overall. Something was wrong in Volusia it would be revealed later.

The computer glitches in Volusia and Brevard Counties were discovered and corrected, and consequently the TV networks again reversed their call, taking Florida out of the Bush column and calling it “too close to call”, where it remained for several weeks.

The computer error in Volusia Counter was later publicly said to be due to a faulty memory card, with little or no further explanation. It was considered to be accidental, nobody was prosecuted for it, and it stirred up little national attention or concern. The bigger questions are: 1) Were these computer errors purposeful or accidental; and 2) How many other computer errors occurred that night that were not caught?

Probably few people will ever know the answers to these questions. After all, as I will discuss in Chapter 3, the results produced by these electronic voting machines cannot be verified. So unless the errors are massive, as they were in Volusia County, there is little chance of catching them. At least one computer voting expert, Bev Harris, author of Black Box Voting, believes she has good evidence that the error was purposeful, though it didn’t work exactly as planned.


Why did the automatic machine recount reduce Bush’s lead by 80% – from 1784 to 327?

In order to understand the 2000 Presidential election and its importance to future elections in our country, it is instructive to understand the reason why the machine recount reduced Bush’s lead by 80%.

The reduction in Bush’s lead following the machine recount was due almost entirely to the addition of Gore votes in counties that used punch card voting machines. As punch card machines get old they become less efficient at what they are supposed to do – punch holes in ballots. Consequently, use of the older machines often results in failures to fully punch a hole in the card. In some cases the hole may be nearly complete, so that a piece of cardboard (called a chad) is barely hanging from the card, in other cases there may be just a small hole in the card, and in still other cases there may be no tear at all, but only a little dimple. The vote counting component of the machine can only count votes for hole punches that are complete, that is, where any remaining cardboard material is not covering the hole. Thus it is that failures to punch complete holes in the card reduce the vote count. But the act of running cards through the machine a second time tends to cause stray pieces of cardboard that are only loosely attached to the card to fall off, thus enabling the machine to read the ballots as votes where the hole is punched.

For a variety of political reasons, poor areas generally have to make do with older machines than wealthier areas. Consequently, poor areas are generally characterized by a much greater number of undervotes (ballots that register no vote because the hole is not complete) than wealthier areas. Since poor areas tend to vote Democratic, that means that Democratic candidates tend to suffer from this problem. Thus it was that as the cards were run through the machine a second time and many of the hanging chads broke off, the Democratic candidate, Al Gore, gained ground.

This is a problem that almost routinely occurs in almost all elections that use the Votomatic punch card voting machines, not just the 2000 Presidential election in Florida.


In my next post in this series I’ll discuss the highly controversial 36 day Florida recount, which ended when the U.S. Supreme Court abruptly ended the vote count and awarded the Florida and thereby the national election to George W. Bush in what many consider to be one of the three worst U.S. Supreme Court decisions in U.S. history.
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The Stealing of the 2000 Presidential Election (Original Post) Time for change Jun 2012 OP
I hope you are prepared for success. russspeakeasy Jun 2012 #1
Thank you. Time for change Jun 2012 #19
Thank you for this clear explanation of what happened. I was in Europe at the time and sabrina 1 Jun 2012 #2
Thanks -- There were a great many of us that felt certain that Gore had won Time for change Jun 2012 #20
VERY happy to hear this. bleever Jun 2012 #3
Thank you so much, bleever Time for change Jun 2012 #26
One of the three worst U.S. Supreme Court decisions in history and, imnsho, indepat Jun 2012 #4
Thanks. With regard to "take no prisoners": Time for change Jun 2012 #38
Looking forward to reading your new book Rosa Luxemburg Jun 2012 #5
And Al Gore himself said 'Well, if the supreme court ruled...what could we do? The next step would FailureToCommunicate Jun 2012 #6
This is excellent. Gregorian Jun 2012 #7
I knew that something was rotten in Denmark Art_from_Ark Jun 2012 #14
Thank you very much. The many people who don't have any idea what happened in the 2000 Florida Time for change Jun 2012 #42
A book that very badly needs to be written. Thank you for doing this!! jillan Jun 2012 #8
My pleasure Time for change Jun 2012 #44
Very Timely Turbineguy Jun 2012 #9
Welcome to DU3. This is the first post of yours in DU3 I have seen. rhett o rick Jun 2012 #10
I'll be interested to hear them, thanks. Time for change Jun 2012 #45
Thanks!!! for this. Looking forward to your article on the Florida recount! patrice Jun 2012 #11
Thanks Time for change Jun 2012 #50
Please Offer Your Book as Downloadable eBook (pdf, Nook, Kindle) solarman350 Jun 2012 #12
Thanks for the advice Time for change Jun 2012 #51
Excellent as usual. hay rick Jun 2012 #13
Thank you -- This was indeed a bitter and catastrophic event Time for change Jun 2012 #53
Awsome writing, you are good. This is just what we need to wake up the sheep. crazyjoe Jun 2012 #15
Thank you -- Every day we felt like the weight of the world was hanging on what Time for change Jun 2012 #54
based on the sample, not only will they be satisfied, crazyjoe Jun 2012 #79
The first thing I said to my brother when guy came running down the steps Spitfire of ATJ Jun 2012 #16
Great to see you again! Glad you are taking on this topic. It now seems like a long term game plan Overseas Jun 2012 #17
I love your discussion of the corporate news media comparisons of Gore and Bush Time for change Jun 2012 #22
K & R AzDar Jun 2012 #18
K&R nt raouldukelives Jun 2012 #21
Looking forward to your book. Thanks for the preview. mnhtnbb Jun 2012 #23
will it be out in time for xmas? Tuesday Afternoon Jun 2012 #24
Thanks - The plan is to get it out in enough time before the election that it can be useful Time for change Jun 2012 #55
good idea. Hope you make it. Congrats! Tuesday Afternoon Jun 2012 #59
Should be a blast to read! nt greytdemocrat Jun 2012 #25
Looks good, and badly needed. RevStPatrick Jun 2012 #27
Thank you. Time for change Jun 2012 #57
K&R.... KoKo Jun 2012 #28
Excellent! I can't think anyone who'd bring a more thorough fact based retrospective. K&R Ellipsis Jun 2012 #29
Thank you Time for change Jun 2012 #58
Well written! JustAnotherGen Jun 2012 #30
Long time, Time for Change freedom fighter jh Jun 2012 #31
Thank you Time for change Jun 2012 #72
The scene from the Bush household... bvar22 Jun 2012 #32
Yes, their reaction when it looked like he didn't win was telling also. Almost as if they sabrina 1 Jun 2012 #69
k and r. bbgrunt Jun 2012 #33
Glad to see your posts again. The last two posts of yours I have read are like a Autumn Jun 2012 #34
That's high praise, thank you Time for change Jun 2012 #61
Yes, and I have seen a couple of your replies to posts Autumn Jun 2012 #65
your experience of election night is nearly the same as mine...and that little detail put me nashville_brook Jun 2012 #35
Yeah, that was one of the worst days of my life Time for change Jun 2012 #62
Kicked and recommended. Uncle Joe Jun 2012 #36
My pleasure, Uncle Joe Time for change Jun 2012 #63
and another thing...DU started in the wake of this debacle, we're BORN of this mess. nashville_brook Jun 2012 #37
And yet how many here are worried about the theft of the 2012 election? rhett o rick Jun 2012 #46
bookmarking to read when I have more time JHB Jun 2012 #39
I sat on my couch in disbelief; kitt6 Jun 2012 #40
For the "chad" issue, be sure to check out Dan Rather's HDNET report on the paper company davidwparker Jun 2012 #41
Wow, I didn't know about that one. Time for change Jun 2012 #64
There was also the trial run of voter suppression CitizenK9 Jun 2012 #43
It was very effective -- Probably cost Gore thousands or tens of thousands of votes Time for change Jun 2012 #70
DU rec...nt SidDithers Jun 2012 #47
What about Fox being the first network to call Florida for Bush? Initech Jun 2012 #48
They were happy about that computer "glitch" in Volusia County Time for change Jun 2012 #71
The next three generations The Wizard Jun 2012 #49
With what is happening now in Florida... kentuck Jun 2012 #52
Electoral Reform Coalition, end the two-party duopoly ElectoralReform Jun 2012 #56
I agree with you on that Time for change Jun 2012 #73
You need to read the TOS for this website. MADem Jun 2012 #77
Have you watched "American Blackout?" duhneece Jun 2012 #60
Incredibly funny. rrHeretic Jun 2012 #66
I remember this like it was yesterday... tallahasseedem Jun 2012 #67
Thank you. Time for change Jun 2012 #74
Fair and transparent elections are the key to this country's future. Thank you for reminding us. live love laugh Jun 2012 #68
my only advice is remove all mentions of Bev Harris Godhumor Jun 2012 #75
+1 . . .n/t annabanana Jun 2012 #76
You have to give her some credit, she was a force in crazyjoe Jun 2012 #80
No, I really don't Godhumor Jun 2012 #82
kick. Ellipsis Jun 2012 #78
I will never forgive and will never forget the SCOTUS's treason. Odin2005 Jun 2012 #81

sabrina 1

(62,325 posts)
2. Thank you for this clear explanation of what happened. I was in Europe at the time and
Fri Jun 22, 2012, 08:14 PM
Jun 2012

wasn't keeping up with the news, other than wondering why it was taking so long to declare a winner, who I was certain would be Gore.

Good luck with your book, it is a good time for it with what is going on in Florida right now.

Time for change

(13,714 posts)
20. Thanks -- There were a great many of us that felt certain that Gore had won
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 07:22 AM
Jun 2012

After the networks called Florida, Michigan and Pennsylvania for Gore, it appeared to be over. It wasn't too long after that that 16 thousand votes for Bush showed up in Volusia County in a precinct with 600 voters and that the networks quickly jumped on that to call Florida and the national election for Bush. God only knows how many votes Bush accumulated in that way on a lesser scale which was never identified.

Good point about Florida. They appear to be trying to do the exact same thing that they did in 2000 and 2004. Their Republican Governor Charlie Crist wouldn't go along with that crap in 2008. You have to admire him for that. Too bad he lost his bid for the U.S. Senate.

bleever

(20,616 posts)
3. VERY happy to hear this.
Fri Jun 22, 2012, 08:29 PM
Jun 2012

I know it will be an excellent book, coming from one of DU's very best researchers and writers.

indepat

(20,899 posts)
4. One of the three worst U.S. Supreme Court decisions in history and, imnsho,
Fri Jun 22, 2012, 08:32 PM
Jun 2012

the felonious five gets more feloniouser by the day. Anxiously await your book: hope you take no prisoners.

Time for change

(13,714 posts)
38. Thanks. With regard to "take no prisoners":
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 01:19 PM
Jun 2012

The first time I wrote about the coup de tat by the felonious five (which was my first DU post ever --Lest we Forget -- posted under another name) I referred to them as the "supreme scumbuckets". I've toned it down a bit for the book, but maybe I shouldn't. I'd like to know what my publisher will think of that idea.

FailureToCommunicate

(14,013 posts)
6. And Al Gore himself said 'Well, if the supreme court ruled...what could we do? The next step would
Fri Jun 22, 2012, 09:00 PM
Jun 2012

have to be revolution'

And the rest, as they say, is history.


Gregorian

(23,867 posts)
7. This is excellent.
Fri Jun 22, 2012, 09:29 PM
Jun 2012

After watching every minute of the election process that was broadcast, I came away from the 2000 election thinking that it had followed the democratic process. Only years afterward on this forum did I realize how wrong I was. Now I'm not ignorant, but I might as well have been. And being more vigilant than many, and liberal, I know there are many who still don't realize the terrible injustice that was done to this country through that flawed election.

I can't praise you enough for doing this. For all you know it may be the thing that makes the difference.

Art_from_Ark

(27,247 posts)
14. I knew that something was rotten in Denmark
Fri Jun 22, 2012, 11:43 PM
Jun 2012

when I heard that bu$h's brother was governor of the key state and his campaign manager was counting the votes.

Time for change

(13,714 posts)
42. Thank you very much. The many people who don't have any idea what happened in the 2000 Florida
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 03:14 PM
Jun 2012

election can be largely chalded up to woefully inadequate coverage of our communications media.

It would be really great if this book made a difference in that regard.

 

rhett o rick

(55,981 posts)
10. Welcome to DU3. This is the first post of yours in DU3 I have seen.
Fri Jun 22, 2012, 10:05 PM
Jun 2012

Glad you are posting here. I have read part of your book and have a few comments. I am remiss in not getting back to you.

 

solarman350

(136 posts)
12. Please Offer Your Book as Downloadable eBook (pdf, Nook, Kindle)
Fri Jun 22, 2012, 10:50 PM
Jun 2012

That way, you can sell 24/7/365 and your book will reach a larger audience.

--Hope that helps.

SolarMan350

hay rick

(7,606 posts)
13. Excellent as usual.
Fri Jun 22, 2012, 11:07 PM
Jun 2012

Look forward to your future posts on this bitter subject and catastrophic turning point in American history.

Time for change

(13,714 posts)
53. Thank you -- This was indeed a bitter and catastrophic event
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 05:56 PM
Jun 2012

Just think: If just the over-votes would have been counted we probably would have had no war with Iraq or Afghanistan; no 9/11; no major recession; we'd be well on our way to dealing with saving our planet for human habitation. Well, maybe I'm dreaming, but that's the way I see it.

 

crazyjoe

(1,191 posts)
15. Awsome writing, you are good. This is just what we need to wake up the sheep.
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 12:09 AM
Jun 2012

I look forward to reading the next in the series, that was the most stressful 36 days of my life!!
Will you have this published and available in time to the election? God, i hope so.
friggin votomatic machines!!

Time for change

(13,714 posts)
54. Thank you -- Every day we felt like the weight of the world was hanging on what
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 05:59 PM
Jun 2012

was going on in Florida.

The plan is to have it availabe prior to the election.

I can't say for sure, I guess it depends on whether my publisher is satisfied with my product.

 

crazyjoe

(1,191 posts)
79. based on the sample, not only will they be satisfied,
Sun Jun 24, 2012, 02:17 PM
Jun 2012

they will be ecstatic!! In order to make a real impact, you need to get Rachel, the turks, big Ed, all talking about this book. Have you sent anything over to MSNBC?
Another idea would be to ask Keith Olberman to maybe write the forward for you?
Or even better, the man himself, Al Gore. That would lend legitimacy, and get publicity.

 

Spitfire of ATJ

(32,723 posts)
16. The first thing I said to my brother when guy came running down the steps
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 12:23 AM
Jun 2012

of the US Supreme Court and said the ruling would make Bush the President was, "That's it! We're going to war!"

Overseas

(12,121 posts)
17. Great to see you again! Glad you are taking on this topic. It now seems like a long term game plan
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 12:58 AM
Jun 2012

on the part of the determined right wing, to solidify corporate control of our country.

You didn't mention the voter roll purging, conducted by Jeb's darling Secretary of State's office, perhaps because Greg Palast has already covered that very well. http://www.gregpalast.com/one-million-black-votes-didnt-count-in-the-2000-presidential-election-rnits-not-too-hard-to-get-your-vote-lost-if-some-politicians-want-it-to-be-lost/ and http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/events/newsnight/1174115.stm But it is quite relevant today, with Republicans across the country trying to cull their voter rolls of likely Democrats. In Jeb's case they pretended to be eliminating felons from their rolls and cut those whose last names resembled those of felons. The data mining company even told them their cuts were too broad and they'd probably want the company to refine them and that company was told not to bother. Today Rick Scott I think is the one culling Hispanic surnames claiming to be trying to catch "illegals" on the voter rolls.

I remember when watching the hand recount, we were supposed to be thinking how ridiculous it all was-- ogling the hanging chads and such. How clumsy and cumbersome those dang paper ballots were! It now seems to have been designed to encourage people to accept the electronic voting systems-- even with proprietary software designed by supporters of the GOP! And the Brooks Brothers riots in the polling place were meant to add to the sense of how messy and unruly those darned paper ballots can be.

I feel funny thinking of how much seems pre-planned, and yet, I remember thinking, during the smarmy impeachment hearings of Clinton, with all the pundit commentary about what a drain this was on our country, that the whole show may have been designed to sour us all on pursuing impeachment ever again because the GOP had someone really bad in the wings. And they did. And our Nancy took impeachment off the table because it would be so divisive and draining for our country. That was really eerie. Because it would not have been divisive and draining-- it would have been an ultimate reality check. Instead, our country went on to have a snazzy new drama on Fox called "24" that made torture look cool.

Here and now, while we are understandably alarmed by right wing voter roll purging and voter ID restrictions aimed at reducing the number of eligible Democratic voters in 2012, and fighting against them, we are not eliminating electronic voting or changing it to eliminate proprietary secret software and require receipts and auditable paper trails. Even though those systems have been proven susceptible to manipulation time and again. I look forward to your descriptions of the live TV airing of the electronic voting systems being hacked and tallies flipped. And your references to the reports of software engineers on the lack of integrity in the electronic voting systems nationwide. And how John Conyers was relegated to a basement room when trying to hold hearings on election integrity.

Thank you for reminding me of all the twists and turns of election 2000.

I know I've jumped ahead to raise issues about subsequent elections when electronic vote flips in the wee hours led to final counts at quite significant disparity with exit polls.

It may be worthwhile including information about how often we have judged other countries' elections as fraudulent based on such disparities.

Because in the meantime, our pundits have come up with all kinds of ridiculous explanations about why we just can't trust those darn exit polls here in the USA.

Sadly, in addition to pouring billions into lobbying and campaign contributions to undermine our democracy, there has been a concerted campaign to destroy our annoying right to vote.

And each of those mysterious vote flips were explained away by those awful right wing smear campaigns-- look at those horrible ads they ran against the war heroes, Max Cleland and John Kerry. Look at those deceptive robocalls and fliers misdirecting people about where they should vote.

While the electronic voting manipulations were being field tested, there were always old fashioned dirty tricks going on to divert our attention. And sober discussion about how the nation just preferred the Beer Guy Torturer to the Dusty Patrician War Hero. How the "regular folk" just had to have preferred the draft dodging Bush boy to the uptight geek who wanted to save the planet and put the social security funds into a damn lock box.

I'm still stunned, having stayed awake during the wee hours of the 2004 election and after reading so much about electronic voting, that here we are again, looking at GOP dirty tricks and shameless voter purging efforts and billionaires buying candidates with understandable alarm, without having addressed the integrity of our electronic voting systems in any substantial way.

We all seem to be pretending that we don't know what can and has been done. We are supposed to tell one another that nothing has been proven, when it has.

So thank you for taking it all on. I look forward to reading more and getting the book to remind me of what I have lived through, because we do try so hard to forget.




Time for change

(13,714 posts)
22. I love your discussion of the corporate news media comparisons of Gore and Bush
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 08:35 AM
Jun 2012

So right on target.

I'll get to the 2000 Florida voter purges in post # 3 of this series. And the pending 2012 Florida voter purges later on.

There is so much to talk about.

Pelosi taking impeachment off of the table was indeed eerie. And so disappointing. I wish I knew why she did it. Was her life in danger? Or just her new job?

Yes indeed, "we are supposed to tell one another that nothing has been proven, when it has". Trying to explain the reasons for the national silence on this issue is perhaps the greatest challenge I'm trying to deal with.





 

RevStPatrick

(2,208 posts)
27. Looks good, and badly needed.
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 10:51 AM
Jun 2012

Haven't seen you around here in a while.
I always enjoyed your writing.

I remember going to bed on election night, thinking that Al Gore had won.
And then waking up the next morning, and Bush had won.
It was like waking up in a completely different world, and nothing has been the same ever since.

Frankly, I would probably never actually read this book, because I followed everything pretty closely back in the day, and have no desire to relive the horror that we went through back then! But I probably would buy this book, and maybe even multiple copies to give to people who still don't understand what happened.

Good luck!

bvar22

(39,909 posts)
32. The scene from the Bush household...
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 11:47 AM
Jun 2012

...after the media announced that Gore had won Florida was ALL I needed to see.
The smugness, laughing, and unqualified statements that "No. We are gonna take Florida"
(wink, wink) were all the "Tells" necessary to lead me to KNOW that The FIX was IN.

sabrina 1

(62,325 posts)
69. Yes, their reaction when it looked like he didn't win was telling also. Almost as if they
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 07:51 PM
Jun 2012

were incredulous that their plans had not worked out.

Autumn

(45,057 posts)
34. Glad to see your posts again. The last two posts of yours I have read are like a
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 12:04 PM
Jun 2012

glass of ice water in the desert.

Autumn

(45,057 posts)
65. Yes, and I have seen a couple of your replies to posts
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 07:25 PM
Jun 2012

that are pretty damn awesome too. Thank you for the post that got hidden. I printed that one out and saved it.

nashville_brook

(20,958 posts)
35. your experience of election night is nearly the same as mine...and that little detail put me
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 12:54 PM
Jun 2012

right back there, reliving it.

i believe we witnessed a coup in slow motion over those 36 days, and i've never felt quite as hopeless as the night gore conceded.

there was a caller to the diane rehm show this week who brought up gore's request that we "accept" the supreme court decision and not "riot in the streets." he was angry and said that democrats always concede and play nice for the good of the republic while the GOP doesn't hesitate to sink the country to get their way on much lesser issues.

the caller said his peace and hung up...but there's no peace there, and none here inside my own democratic soul. it's time that we "accept" that our acceptance of these things are NOT what the republic needs. the republic in fact demands our anger and demands that we fight from here on out.

so glad to be reading you again, TFC!!

Time for change

(13,714 posts)
62. Yeah, that was one of the worst days of my life
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 07:20 PM
Jun 2012

Actually, it was probably the worst day of all of our lives, even the vast majority of those who voted for Bush -- they just didn't know it at the time, and probably still don't.

nashville_brook

(20,958 posts)
37. and another thing...DU started in the wake of this debacle, we're BORN of this mess.
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 01:05 PM
Jun 2012

these crimes against democracy are in the DNA of this site (to speak of it in a meta way as if it's an entity), and it seems that over the years we've largely forgotten from whence we came.

I started reading and lurking here during this period, and finally started posting in 2004 after the second election was stolen. it's good to be reminded of this.

 

rhett o rick

(55,981 posts)
46. And yet how many here are worried about the theft of the 2012 election?
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 04:35 PM
Jun 2012

We were "fooled" once in 2000 and then "fooled" again in 2004, how many times will the Democratic Party be fooled again?

NO ELECTRONIC VOTING. Bring back fair elections.

davidwparker

(5,397 posts)
41. For the "chad" issue, be sure to check out Dan Rather's HDNET report on the paper company
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 02:38 PM
Jun 2012

who changed to a cheap grade of paper during that election. It demonstrates the rate in which that paper resulted in "hanging chads" and the more reliable rate of previously-used paper stock.

That cheaper grade paper sure cost the country plenty. Those who worked at that paper company knew what the problem was when they heard about the hanging chads.

Very interesting report.

On edit: The transcript is no doubt still available.

 

CitizenK9

(22 posts)
43. There was also the trial run of voter suppression
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 03:29 PM
Jun 2012

using the erroneous (but intentionally compiled) felon lists. How effective was that? I'm pretty sure it was never prosecuted.

Time for change

(13,714 posts)
70. It was very effective -- Probably cost Gore thousands or tens of thousands of votes
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 08:13 PM
Jun 2012

I'll be discussing that in a later post

Time for change

(13,714 posts)
71. They were happy about that computer "glitch" in Volusia County
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 08:14 PM
Jun 2012

I don't doubt that they knew about it when they made the call.

The Wizard

(12,541 posts)
49. The next three generations
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 05:16 PM
Jun 2012

will be paying for the Mediocre Court's theft of the election. It was flat out criminal.

kentuck

(111,079 posts)
52. With what is happening now in Florida...
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 05:52 PM
Jun 2012

it is all very believable. It's like a criminal returning to the scene of the crime...

ElectoralReform

(2 posts)
56. Electoral Reform Coalition, end the two-party duopoly
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 06:29 PM
Jun 2012

They were totally stolen, but I don't trust either party now to save our democracy....

http://electoralreformcoalition.wordpress.com

The two-party winner-take-all electoral system is not a great idea, and everyone knows it. It's divisive, simplistic, corruptible and undemocratic.
Vote for electoral reform this election, and you will never again have to vote for the 'lesser of two evils' at the risk of 'wasting your vote' on a party that truly represents you. End the two-party duopoly!

Who is to blame for our diminishing civil rights and power to control our government? The liberals, the conservatives, the president, the previous president, the Congress, the courts, the corporations, the terrorists, the U.N., the media, the Federal reserve, big banks, and money in politics?

With so many problems, it is important to focus on the root cause, where concentrated efforts can give rise to tangible, door-opening results. I contend that the first step for everyone, whether liberal, conservative, concerned about civil rights, war, abortion, immigration, gun control or any issue, lies in our electoral system.

Our winner-take-all electoral system allows only two parties. They become massive, corruptible, and broad in their rhetoric but minimal in their differences. Around the nation, most voters view their opposition party as tyrannical and evil, while their chosen party is simply “the lesser of two evils.” They do not vote for a third party, even one closer to their political ideology, because it is viewed as a wasted vote. That is not democracy.

 

rrHeretic

(52 posts)
66. Incredibly funny.
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 07:33 PM
Jun 2012

The very first thing you wrote about making 'Americans more vigilant'. Yeah, first you have to inject a brain in most of the voters and then try to get them to really give a crap. The fact that the war criminal Bush is walking around free makes intelligent people want to vomit. Why is he walking around? Because people care more about those insipid reality shows on TV than any election.

tallahasseedem

(6,716 posts)
67. I remember this like it was yesterday...
Sat Jun 23, 2012, 07:46 PM
Jun 2012

What a complete and utter nightmare.

I look forward to reading your book! Best of luck!

 

crazyjoe

(1,191 posts)
80. You have to give her some credit, she was a force in
Sun Jun 24, 2012, 02:21 PM
Jun 2012

bringing the BBV to light, along with Andy Stephenson.

Godhumor

(6,437 posts)
82. No, I really don't
Sun Jun 24, 2012, 03:54 PM
Jun 2012

Of someone tools me that Bev had discovered a sure proof immortality drug, my first question would be who she stole it from.

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