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Jan. 3, 2001
Al Gore's supporters and their allies in the media continue to
falsify the facts about Florida in order to try to delegitimize George
W. Bush's election. To make sure that spin does not replace reality,
let's examine some of these myths.
Myth: The U.S. Supreme Court decision in Bush v. Gore proves
that, contrary to their oft-proclaimed opposition to judicial activism,
conservatives really favor it when it suits their partisan causes.
In fact, someone (thank you, U.S. Supreme Court) had to stop the
runaway Florida supreme court that gave us two textbook cases on the
evils of judicial activism. That Florida court tried to rewrite
Florida election law to assist Gore by overruling lower Florida courts,
changing statutory deadlines, and creating new recount procedures.
Myth: Because of their customary support of states' rights,
Justice Antonin Scalia and the other Supreme Court conservatives were
inconsistent and partisan in overturning the Florida supreme court's
interpretation of Florida law.
Scalia is a legal textualist who consistently prefers to rely on
the actual statutory text rather than judicial interpretations,
political intent, or penumbras. The various Gore recount schemes were
clearly far outside what the Constitution and the statute provide, and
it was absolutely consistent for Scalia and the other majority Justices
to reverse such an unprecedented judicial rewrite of the law.
Myth: Stevens attacked the conservatives on the U.S. Supreme Court
as being partisan.
Contrary to the spin added by most commentators, Stevens' much-
quoted criticism was about the Florida judges, not the U.S. Supreme
Court Justices. What Stevens actually said was that the loser in this
election is "the Nation's confidence in the [state] judge as an
impartial guardian of the rule of law."
Stevens is absolutely right; we don't have confidence in judges
deciding an election. The nation, indeed, was shocked that the high
Florida court could act in such a blatantly partisan manner in trying
to throw the election to Gore.
Myth: The U.S. Supreme Court was sharply divided 5-4 over whether
the Florida supreme Court did the right thing.
In fact, all nine Justices reversed the first Florida supreme
Court decision. In the second U.S. Supreme Court decision, none of the
Justices expressed much support for what the Florida supreme court did.
Although the majority reversing the second Florida supreme court
decision was 5 to 4, the dissenters all expressed concern about the
varying counting standards. The most positive comment about the
Florida supreme court was Justice Stevens saying, "It did what courts
do."
Myth: "The Supreme Court held that the Florida statutory standard
for manual examination of ballots violates equal protection rights."
Even the Florida Supreme Court repeated this myth. In fact, the
U.S. Supreme Court made no ruling against the statutory counting
methods, but only ruled that the judicially-ordered 11th-hour partial
manual recount violated constitutional equal protection rights.
Myth: Gore offered to have a manual recount of the entire state
of Florida.
In fact, neither Gore nor his lawyers ever asked for a statewide
manual recount of any kind. Gore did once suggest that he meet with
George W. Bush and make some sort of private deal for a recount, but
Gore's lawyers never asked the election officials or the courts for a
statewide recount.
Myth: George W. Bush was hypocritical to oppose counting dimpled
chads in Florida after he had pushed through a law in Texas to count
them.
Three counties in Texas use punch cards and the law does say that
dimpled chads can be counted in some circumstances. But the law was
passed in 1993, before Bush was Governor and, according to a Washington
Post investigation, no other state counts dimpled chads.
Myth: The Florida standard for a legal vote is based on the
intent of the voter.
In fact, a legal vote in Florida is one that is counted by the
statutory counting methods in effect. The statute mentions intent of
the voter only in cases where a damaged ballot is not machine readable
or if a machine malfunctions.
Myth: Not all legal votes were counted.
In fact, the so-called undervote ballots were machine-read twice
and all lawful votes were recorded. No actual machine error was
demonstrated; the machines functioned as intended.
Myth: Gore never got the manual recounts that he was entitled to
under Florida law.
Florida law does not require manual recounts. It only says that a
manual recount is one of three alternatives in the protest phase in
case the counting machines malfunction.
Myth: Gore was entitled to contest the election if a more
accurate counting method could be found.
Gore was entitled to sue in the Florida circuit court to "correct
an alleged wrong," but Gore never alleged any wrongdoing. He only had
a theory that another counting methodology might have been better for
him in some cases, but that is no argument for a judge to change the
methodology; at best, it might be an argument for the legislature to
revise the law before the next election.
Myth: Bush delayed the proceedings until time ran out for a
recount.
The biggest delay was the 12-day certification delay that was
imposed by the Florida supreme court at Gore's request. That delay, as
well as the fact that Gore had no real case, prevented Gore from
completing his protest of the election.
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