By Paul M. Weyrich on 12.13.04 @ 12:04AM
Recounts are for states like Washington where the gubernatorial race was virtual dead heat, not for a state where the recounters’ hero lost by some 117,000 votes.
WASHINGTON -- There once was a time when the Rev. Jesse Jackson
intervened in instances of genuine injustice. At that time there
was racial discrimination on a variety of fronts. I have never been
a fan but I have to concede that he once did some good. That was
then and this is now. Today Jackson seems to be continually in
search of a cause, and seldom finds one that requires his
presence.
Jackson is in Ohio, where liberals have raised enough money to
fund a recount in the Presidential race. It was Ohio which put
President Bush over the top in the Electoral College. That the
President carried the state by approximately 117,000 votes is
something that the far left cannot accept. Therefore, they are now
inventing all sorts of problems which supposedly occurred during
the 2004 elections.
It doesn't hinder Jackson and his compatriots that the Secretary
of State of Ohio is a black man, Ken Blackwell. Do they actually
think that Blackwell wants to suppress the Black vote? Then again
Blackwell is a Republican, and from the far-left vantage point all
Republicans want to prevent Blacks from voting.
Jackson and company charge that there were long lines at polling
places in black precincts. I've got news for that crowd. There were
hours-long lines where I voted. All over the country, when I talked
with folks on Election Day they reported the same thing.
Immeasurable media stories reported the same phenomena.
Jackson also charges that there were malfunctioning voting
machines. Blackwell said there were occasional voting machine
problems but nothing significant.
Jackson further charges that there was misinformation spread by
Republicans in black precincts. He did not clarify the exact nature
of the misinformation. In the past Jackson has charged that blacks
were told the wrong date of an election and that polling places
were changed. There was absolutely no evidence to support claims
such as these in this election.
SO WHY THE RECOUNT IN A STATE where it is a certainty the results
will not be overturned? It would seem that Jackson and his friends
in Congress, some members of the Black Caucus, want to try to bring
the legitimacy of President Bush's come-from-behind victory into
question.
Jackson and his comrades can't complain this year as they did in
2000 that Bush was selected (by the Supreme Court), not
elected.
They can't complain, as they did in 2000, that Bush only won the
Electoral College and not the popular vote. Bush won approximately
three and a half million more votes than did Senator John
Kerry.
They can't complain, as they did in 2000, that Bush got
favorable media attention. This election the major media wasn't
just biased against Bush, it had a clear agenda the defeat of the
President of the United States.
Therefore, with nothing to complain about, with the Red States
having made a clear statement to the Blue States, the Jackson crowd
has to gin up problems so they can have a basis for questioning the
outcome of the 2004 election.
Recounts very seldom change results. Indeed, most of the
leftwing groups which have paid for the Ohio recount have conceded
that they will not change the result. Even if they have the money,
there is no real reason for this recount. It is just wasting the
time of good people. The Jackson claim that Senator Kerry conceded
too soon and thus took the media scrutiny away from Ohio is
absurd.
Does Jackson think if Senator Kerry and his firebrand running
mate, Senator John Edwards, had any hope of turning the result
around in Ohio they would have walked away? Democratic National
Chairman Terry McAuliffe promised the media that Bush "is a goner."
If McAuliffe thought there was any chance that the Ohio result
could have been changed, he would have thrown his body in front of
Kerry and Edwards to keep them from conceding.
Congressman John Conyers, a longtime hard-line leftist, held a
hearing on the alleged abuses against the black community in Ohio.
Ralph Neas, president of People for the American Way, claimed that
Ken Blackwell should be prosecuted for committing fraud in the Ohio
elections. Just what it was that Blackwell supposedly did was not
clear.
MEANWHILE, IN THE WASHINGTON STATE Governor's race a hand recount
of the entire State is underway. Republican Dino Rossi has been
certified the winner by just 42 votes out of the 2.9 million cast.
The first recount, which was done by recalculating all of the
voting machines in the state, cut down Rossi's margin from 219 to
42 votes. The hand recount (Washington state has backup paper
ballots to the machine calculation) is the last-resort the Democrat
Party retains. The party is in court attempting to have many
ballots with irregularities counted which were thrown out in the
original tabulation.
At this point it isn't clear if the gubernatorial race will be
decided by the January deadline. Washington state absolutely has
grounds for a hand recount. Moreover, you can't blame the Democrats
for wanting to get those disputed ballots counted. Were the shoe on
the other foot Republicans would be doing the same thing. This is a
race where the results may indeed change because of the recount.
When millions of voters cast their ballots and the result is that
close, whatever cost is required to find out who really won is
absolutely justified. The officials of both parties who are active
in that recount are not meddling; they are performing a public
service.
If you compare the Washington state experience with that in
Ohio, it is a study in contrasts.
In Ohio there is no chance to overturn the result. In Washington
State there is a real possibility that the result will be
overturned.
In Ohio the leftists who raised the money for the recount are
first-class meddlers. In Washington State only both major parties
are involved.
In Ohio the desired result of the organizers of the recount is
to discredit the system. In Washington state the desired of the
party officials involved in the recount is to strengthen the
democratic process -- namely, to reassure citizens that every
single vote counts.
There have been examples of recounts waged in order to steal the
election from the rightful winner. The Wisconsin legislature's
famous Olson-Elfers recount in 1960 rigged the election in favor of
Republican Olson. Likewise, in the Democratic Congress' recount of
the 8th District of Indiana in 1984 (the recount extended into
1985) Democrats stole the House seat from Republican Rick McIntyre,
the rightful victor.
However, most recounts are honest. In most states recounts are
required when the result separates the major candidates by less
than one percent of the vote. Recounts when the vote separating the
major candidates is more than 200 almost never change the results.
But that is not always the case. Senator Slade Gorton (R-WA) was
thought to have won his re-election bid in 2000 but the recount
reversed the results and today Senator Maria Cantwell (D-WA) has
his seat.
In short, ordinarily recounts are a regular process to insure
that close elections are properly counted. That is why Ohio is such
an outrage. That recount is only for the purpose of making trouble.
There ought to be a law outlawing that kind of recount.
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Law, Supreme Court, NATO