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What Now?

Posted Monday, Nov. 27, 2000, at 9:30 PM ET

Alan Brinkley is Allan Nevins Professor of History at Columbia University and the author most recently of Liberalism and Its Discontents (click here to buy it). Michael McConnell is the Presidential Professor of Law at the University of Utah. Slate asked them to keep a running commentary on the presidential endgame.

Dear Michael,

An enormous amount has happened since we began our holiday sabbatical, but the bottom line seems to be unchanged. I see no likely scenario at this point that would overturn last night's certification of Bush as the victor in Florida, and thus none likely to produce a Gore victory. The Supreme Court decision to review the Florida ruling on the recounts does not seem to me likely to help the Democrats—although I defer to you on the meaning of the court's surprising decision to accept this case. There will be a great deal of continued maneuvering over the next week or so, and it's possible, of course, for things to change, as they have so often already in this saga. But for the moment I want to assume for purposes of discussion that in the end Bush will win (or at least be elected, since I'm not sure "winning" is the right word at this point for anyone). And given that assumption, the question that I think should be considered at this point is not just "Is it legal?" but also "Is it fair?" (We would, of course, need to ask the same question were Gore to win, so this discussion should be relevant even if my hypothesis turns out to be wrong.)

Fairness, like legality, is an ambiguous concept, and particularly so in the Byzantine world that has emerged from this battle. But the answer to the question of fairness—or more accurately the many answers already emerging to it—will probably do more to shape the popular response to the eventual result than will any court rulings.

First, would it unfair for Gore to lose an election in which he attracted the most votes? Not very. The Electoral College is the law of the land, and Gore was himself quite prepared to accept an electoral victory without a popular one. To his credit, he has not made any claim that his popular margin entitles him to a victory and indeed has repudiated any efforts to persuade electors to change their votes (an unlikely prospect in any case). And of course we don't know what the popular margin would have been without an Electoral College. Everyone would have campaigned very differently in that case.

Second, would it be unfair for Gore to lose Florida, and thus the election, because of ballot confusion and undercounting? Again, not in any truly profound way—assuming (an important caveat in this case) that every legitimate effort to remedy the inaccuracies failed to deliver him a victory. The flawed ballot in Palm Beach County almost certainly cost Gore this election, and the inadequacy of punch-card technology generally, which clearly undercounted his vote in many counties, may have done so as well. (There are more Democratic punch-card counties than Republican ones, so this was a particular disadvantage for Gore.) But this is a kind of unfairness that falls into the category of "Life is unfair," or "Those are the breaks." No one intended for these problems to occur; no one set out to sabotage the Gore campaign, as far as we know. We have to consider them to some degree in the same way we would consider a hurricane on Election Day in the Democratic counties of Florida keeping voters from the polls.

It seems pretty clear that more Floridians went to the polls on Election Day intending to vote for Gore than went to the polls intending to vote for Bush. But the margin was small enough to be lost in the normal inaccuracies of vote counting and, in this case, in the confusion a poor ballot design produced. None of those things would have mattered if either candidate had won more decisively. Now that they have mattered, they take on a magnified importance unrelated to the intent behind them.

Third, is it unfair for Gore now to insist on hand recounts in three Democratic counties without recounts taking place in other counties where Bush would be likely to pick up votes? There is certainly a surface unfairness here, but not a very deep one. The Bush campaign had an equal right to request hand recounts in counties of its choice, and it had later opportunities—opened to it both by the Gore campaign and the court—to request a recount of the entire state or even of its own counties. It refused.

I do not take seriously the Bush campaign's claims that hand counting is inherently less reliable than machine counting. That seems to me a position the campaign adopted to justify opposition to a procedure that they feared they would lose. As I mentioned above, the counties most likely to record significant changes—the counties in which punch-card voting is used—are more Democratic than Republican. To disguise that fear, the Republicans have decided instead to try to discredit the process. Every vote-counting process is subject to error. But the recounts in the three (now two) counties Gore requested, which have been conducted in the face of tremendous obstacles, seem to all outward appearances to have proceeded responsibly, with only a few anecdotal stories of error. Compare that to the machine count, which even the manufacturers of the machines concede produces errors of .5 to 1 percent, depending on how well maintained the machine is. (Last week, I erroneously stated that the margin of error was 5 to 10 percent; but even this much smaller margin is far more than the margin of Bush's apparent victory; a .5 percent swing to Gore in Dade County alone would bring him about 3,000 votes, almost six times Bush's certified margin of victory.) Florida law, Texas law, Illinois law, and the laws of other states—and even the statements of the manufacturers of the technology—all agree that hand counting is more accurate than machine counting, just slower. I feel certain that if Bush were trailing by a few hundred votes instead of leading, he would be asking for hand recounts too. (The question of whether or not to count "dimpled chad" is less clear-cut, and as I noted last week, the Republicans have a reasonable case that the effort to count them constitutes a change in the rules in the middle of the game.)

Fourth, is it unfair for the recounts to proceed past the deadline established by Florida law for certification of the vote? This seems now to be the most bitterly contested question. The Florida election law does indeed create a deadline of seven days after the election for delivery of the vote totals to the secretary of state (a provision of law that I'm sure virtually no one even knew about prior to this month but that now has been elevated to the level of sacred writ). And it gives the secretary of state discretion to accept or reject later totals before certifying the vote. Katherine Harris was certainly within the literal meaning of the law in trying to enforce the deadline and in rejecting the appeals of the three counties for a hand count. But Ms. Harris' close association with the Bush campaign substantially weakens her credibility in asserting that she is only following the law; and her action tonight in refusing to grant Palm Beach County even a few additional hours seems to confirm a rigidity that a genuinely neutral arbiter would not likely have displayed. It seems to me that she should have recused herself from this decision, as Jeb Bush recused himself (at least in theory) from what otherwise would have been his official role in adjudicating the dispute.

There are, as the Democrats argue, ambiguities in the Florida election law. As I've noted, the law also states that hand counting is the preferred method for resolving disputes over results; and hand counting in populous counties cannot realistically be expected to be completed within the seven-day period prior to the deadline. So whatever the legality, it seems clearly unfair for a supposedly neutral official to short-circuit a legally permissible recount simply to enforce a deadline that serves no particular function and that she has the authority to wave. Particularly gratuitous was Harris' demand that the counties stop their recounts, an order that was unnecessary to her supposed duty to enforce the deadline. The recounts could have continued as the basis of a challenge to the results; Ms. Harris' demands that they stop almost certainly ensured that some of the recounts could not be completed by her own deadline, or even by the new one established by the court. (As it turns out, the most significant element of the court's decision may not have been its rejection of the original deadline, but its imposition of a very short new deadline, which made the late-starting recount in Dade County difficult if not impossible to complete.)

Fifth, is it unfair for military absentee ballots to be rejected simply because they contain no postmarks? The courts have ruled that such rejections are legal, but it seems to me that the rejections are clearly unfair. The Democrats who insisted they be excluded made a serious and politically damaging error. Both the Gore campaign and the Democratic attorney general of Florida have since admitted that these votes should be counted, and they should be. (Some of them now have been.)

Sixth, have the rhetorical charges and countercharges that have accompanied this tactical battle been unfair? Yes, they certainly have. Both sides have engaged in excessive rhetoric, but not in equal measure. Some Republicans—including some prominent ones—have, in my view, crossed the line from normal tactical partisanship to truly reckless and irresponsible language. Beginning with the ugly effort 10 days ago to portray the errant voters in Palm Beach County as "stupid" (an effort abetted by Cokie Roberts on Letterman last week) and escalating into charges of "theft," "coup d'etat," and other extravagant claims, some Republicans have drifted into the same netherworld of scorched-earth rhetoric and party zealotry that characterized the behavior of many Republican stalwarts during the impeachment and in some of the battles of the 104th Congress. This has not just been rhetoric. There was an apparently orchestrated riot in a Dade County government building in protest against recounting, which seems likely to have been a factor in the decision to call the recount off; and there were unpleasant, disruptive, and again clearly orchestrated, demonstrations in Broward and Palm Beach counties that have also added to the atmosphere of confusion and hysteria that Republicans clearly want to surround the recount.

Not all, not even most, Republicans have behaved this way, of course; and the Bush campaign itself, in its public face at least, has not been at the center of this effort, which seems more driven by members of Congress. But neither, to my knowledge, have any prominent Republicans repudiated these extravagant charges. There seems to have been a decision early on, a premature decision in my view, that Bush is the clearly established winner and that any efforts to undo his "victory" are clearly illegitimate. Thus, by definition, there can be no legitimate Gore victory, only a "theft" or a "coup." That elevation of normal political difference into a kind of moral absolutism is what makes it difficult to see any even modestly satisfactory outcome to this fiasco. For even if Bush is ultimately elected, as now seems very likely, the excesses of the efforts on his behalf will be difficult for either side to forget. And so the new administration and the new Congress will begin their work not with the fresh, conciliatory start that Bush so often promised, but with an unprecedentedly weak president facing an elevated level of the partisan fury that has been derailing responsible governance for much of the last eight years.

Posted Monday, Nov. 27, 2000, at 9:30 PM ET
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Alan Brinkley is Allan Nevins Professor of History at Columbia University and the author most recently of Liberalism and its Discontents (click here to buy it). Michael McConnell is the Presidential Professor of law at the University of Utah. This week, Slate has asked them to keep a running commentary on the presidential endgame.
COMMENTS

Reader Comments from The Fray:


Michael McConnell argues that even a state-wide hand count might give Gore an unfair advantage, because the questionable punch card ballots were used predominantly in counties that heavily supported Gore. But his logic is flawed; he forgets that the argument for a hand recount--widespread undervoting that a human eye might correct--has already taken this very discrepancy into account. Though the hand recount would most likely discover a larger number of new votes for Gore than Bush because of the problems with punch cards, the inverse is true for the current machine count: Bush has been unfairly over-represented by his support in counties with more technologically advanced voting systems. It is not necessarily improper to concentrate energy on hand recounts in punch card counties, since they are the ones in which problems with unread votes are more likely. While I can't think of any serious argument against a state-wide hand count (except for the question about hand count subjectivity which might be dealt with by simple guidelines), the problem now is simply that the Republicans have argued for too long against hand counting at all, and are thus unable to concede this clear, proper compromise.

--Jared White

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I believe that the hand recount is conducted, ballot by ballot, with a representative of both political parties, both of whom must agree on the party for whom each vote was cast. Any ballot that the two person team does not agree on is then reviewed by a three member panel of non-partisans. My point is simply that the recount is not a subjective as one might think. Since one of the candidates campaigned on the slogan that he "trusts the people" and the other has indicated a willingness to trust the people on this issue, I am surprised there is a problem.

--Carrie McLain

(To reply, click here.)


A way out: the Burr-Hamilton solution.

--APM

(To reply, click here.)

(11/15)


Reader Comments from The Fray:


I find it amusing that the Democrats are telling President-elect Bush that the only way he can succeed is to adopt their agenda.

The popular vote, as close as it was, could have swung Bush's way if it was recounted as Florida was. If California and all the voter irregularity in the excessively liberal and populous states were taken out of the picture, the popular vote across the nation was significantly more for Bush. It presents a more accurate picture of America as a whole to view the popular vote minus California. That's the reason for the Electoral College.

Democrats should be looking and asking themselves why they blew this election rather than deluding themselves that it was stolen. Look within. The liberal lies and scare-mongering, and class warfare language and willingness to depart from the law in order to win at any costs is not going to serve America or the Democratic party well. When America has more time to reflect on the days since the election, the Democrats will not fare so well. That is why the Democrats are trying still to deflect attention from their failures.

Vice-President Gore gave a noble speech last night. For the first time in this election process I gained respect for him. He was finally speaking honestly. Liberals should try honesty instead of distortion and manipulation more often.

--Mark Sherman

(To reply, click here.)


Sorry, but I don't see true bipartisanship happening. The division you see has been growing for decades. It isn't between skinheads or klansmen and 'good honest Americans,' it is between those who are willing to be responsible for themselves, and those who've been inculcated with the idea that they have a god-given right to the fruits of someone else's labor. The Dems have done the indoctrinating, and those of us who flocked to the personal freedom stances of 60's Democratic candidates are appalled at how the current flock of Democrat candidates have taken full advantage of the 'buy a vote with welfare' techniques they've developed over the years. I have predicted class warfare by 2010 since 1975. I may be off a couple years, but dramatic changes are in order

--Dennis Jacques

(To reply, click here.)
Â


Reader Comments from The Fray:


I disagree that what the Supreme Court faces is less compelling than Dred Scott. It's time to get past all this rhetoric and look at what we, as citizens, are being dealt. First of all, forget all the pious cant about the wisdom of the founding fathers. The Constitution was never a document that guaranteed democracy in this country, since the founding fathers' didn't want democracy. They didn't want people to be able to vote for the president, that was the job for politicians. Jefferson himself wrote "the people is an ass." While they may have been against British rule, they were in no shape or form democrats in light of the term today. And the Republicans are not such great believers in democracy today. If they were, they would have worked to get an accurate count in Florida. The Supremes are either going to yank us into the present, for those "asses" like myself, of haul us back into the past. That is the Constitutional issue at stake.

--George Grella

(To reply, click here.)


As we await the Supreme Court's decision, I stand astonished. Not that the Supreme Court delved into the 'miasma' of this election dispute--it is not such a bad idea for the last word of the land to have the last word; what astonished me was Scalia's stated reason for the stay granted. The stay itself was not such a bad idea (I voted for Gore, by the way). The decision needed to be made before there were facts on the ground so that no one felt any more robbed than they already do. However, Scalia's unprecedented indication that he has already made up his mind before even receiving a brief must have ruffled some of his colleague's feathers and perhaps created an environment that may well send the 'swing justices'--Kennedy and O'Connor--into the arms of the solid opposition. Scalia's statement may well turn out to be a self-fulfilling anti-prophecy.

It would be most astonishing if any decision were 5 to 4. I think it is more likely that there will be a more solid majority behind some sort of solomonic solution. One hopes that the court will be very, very cautious not to create law itself.

--Rabbi Jason

(To reply, click here.)


In our world of constant disorder, why is it so surprising that the old technology-based society is colliding with the new tech order? We are transforming our entire society to the new tech order. Many systems have not made the transition. Voting processes and systems are at the top of the list right now. This collision must take place and the new tech order take its proper place in this function of our society. Laws must change to support the new order. For now, the courts must decide the outcome based on our current technology and laws. We must invest the next four years and make our voting systems capable of supporting our transforming society, and build new law in this process.

--Steve R

(To reply, click here.)

(12/11)

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