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New York Times documents military role in theft of
2000 election
By Barry Grey
19 July 2001
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In an extensive report published July 15, the New York Times
shed new light on the methods employed by the Bush campaign
to hijack the 2000 presidential election. The report, entitled
How Bush Took Florida: Mining the Overseas Absentee Vote,
was the product of a six-month investigation by the Times into
Florida officials handling of ballots mailed from outside
the US. These overseas votes became a focal point in the struggle
between Bush and Democratic candidate Al Gore over the disputed
Florida election.
The Times described how the Bush campaign waged a combined
legal and propaganda offensive to pressure canvassing boards in
Republican strongholds to accept overseas ballots that, under
Florida election laws, were illegal and should have been rejected.
At the same time, Bush lawyers pressed canvassing boards in Democratic
counties to reject overseas ballots with identical flaws.
This effort to illegally increase Bushs vote centered
on hundreds of ballots from military personnel stationed overseas.
The Republicans enlisted the aid of the military brass to increase
the number of military ballots. They also pressed local election
boards to validate military ballots that lacked postmarks, bore
postmarks later than the November 7 Election Day, or failed to
meet other legal requirements.
As a result, 680 of the 2,490 overseas ballots that were counted
as legal votes after Election Daymore than one out of every
four such ballotswere defective. Of these, 288 were ballots
that canvassing boards initially rejected on November 17, the
deadline for receiving overseas ballots, but subsequently accepted
under pressure from the Bush campaign, the military and the media.
Bushs official margin of victory in Florida was 537 votes.
Citing the Florida Department of States web site, the Times
reports that without the overseas ballots counted after election
day, Gore would have won Florida, and thus the White House, by
202 votes.
The Bush campaign and Florida officials, headed by Governor
Jeb Bush, the brother of the Republican candidate, engineered
this systematic violation of Florida election laws at the same
time that they were declaring any delay in the statutory date
for certifying the Florida vote to be impermissible, on the grounds
that election laws had to be strictly enforced.
The flagrantly unequal treatment of overseas ballots flew in
the face of the other major contention of the Republicans, namely,
that the lack of specific and uniform criteria for judging disputed
ballots in different counties violated the equal protection clause
of the US Constitution. This novel idea, if consistently applied,
would invalidate elections at every level in the United States,
where election laws differ from state to state and rules and procedures
vary from county to county across the country. Nevertheless, it
was ultimately seized on by the right-wing Republican majority
on the US Supreme Court, which based its 5-4 ruling halting manual
recounts and handing the presidency to Bush on this supposed violation
of the equal protection principle.
Even as the Times presented its account of fraud and
criminality on a massive scale, it sought to lend a veneer of
legitimacy to the election. The article stated, without explanation,
that the Times found no evidence of vote fraud by
either party. It went on to say that its investigation found
no support for the suspicions of Democrats that the Bush campaign
had organized an effort to solicit late votes. At a later
point the article declared, There is no evidence that the
Pentagon knowingly delivered ballots cast illegally after Election
Day.
The authors further cited an authority on voting patterns who
estimated that Bush would have retained a margin of 245 votes
even if the flawed overseas ballots had been discarded.
But the facts presented by the Times account contradict
these conclusions. For example, the article noted that 17 percent
of military overseas ballots from Florida voters arrived without
postmarks, despite military regulations that require all mail
to be postmarked. This extraordinary rate of unmarked mail stood
in sharp contrast to the rest of the country, where less than
1 percent of all overseas military mail arrived without a postmark
during the election period.
The Times reported that Pentagon officials it interviewed
could not fully explain why so many ballots were arriving
without postmarks. One obvious explanation, however, is
that there was a concerted effort to solicit late votes from military
personnel and ship them without postmarks so as to conceal the
fact that they were illegal.
Two political issues emerge most starkly from the Times
report. The first is the role played by the military in fixing
the election.
The involvement of the military brass in the Florida impasse
assumed a public form after Friday, November 17. On that day two
critical events occurred. County canvassing boards in Florida
rejected nearly a third of the overseas ballots received after
Election Day, including hundreds of ballots from military personnel.
Even though the certified total of overseas ballots increased
Bushs official margin by hundreds of votes, it failed to
give the Bush campaign the cushion it deemed necessary to overcome
the additional votes expected to go to the Gore camp if Republican
attempts to halt hand recounts in south Florida failed.
Even more ominous for the Republicans, the Florida Supreme
Court enjoined Secretary of State Harris from carrying out her
plan to preempt the manual recounts and certify Bush the winner
in Florida on Saturday, November 18.
The response of the Bush campaign was to launch a witch-hunting
attack on Gore, portraying the efforts of the Democrats to weed
out illegal military ballots as an anti-American attack on the
armed forces. Montana Governor Marc Racicot, a leading spokesman
for the Republican campaign, called a press conference on November
18 and declared, ...the vice presidents lawyers have
gone to war, in my judgment, against the men and women who serve
in the armed forces.
Retired General Norman Schwarzkopf, the commander of US forces
in the Persian Gulf War and a public supporter of Bush, was brought
forward to denounce Gore for denying servicemen their right to
vote. Schwarzkopf made a point of reminding military personnel
that if Gore won in Florida, he would be their new commander in
chiefa statement that could only be read as a thinly veiled
incitement to insubordination.
In the ensuing days the Bush campaign conducted a two-pronged
drive to force local election officials to validate military ballots
they had rejected on November 17. On the legal front, they filed
suit against 14 canvassing boards in Republican counties, charging
individual canvassing board members with violating federal law
by rejecting military ballots without postmarks or other legal
requirements. These suits had no merit, and were all eventually
dismissed. But they had the desired effect of intimidating recalcitrant
canvassing boards.
On the propaganda front, Republicans at both the national and
state level obtained, through the good graces of the military
brass, the names and e-mail addresses of military personnel stationed
abroad whose ballots had been rejected. They solicited statements
from sailors and Navy pilots denouncing Gore and the Democrats,
which were then fed to a compliant media. At the height of the
furor, to cite one example, Katie Couric of the NBC Today
program interviewed the wife of a Navy pilot who protested the
disqualification of her husbands ballot.
The second critical issue highlighted by the Times articles
is the impotence and cowardice of the Democratic Party, and, above
all, its prostration before the military. Even with the presidency
on the line, both the presidential and vice presidential candidates
of the Democratic Party collapsed in the face of opposition from
the military brass.
The Times provides an account of the appearance of the
vice presidential candidate, Senator Joseph Lieberman, on NBCs
Meet the Press program on Sunday, November 19, one
day after the Republicans launched their witch-hunt over the military
ballots. Even Democratic officials in Florida were shocked by
Liebermans capitulation before the Republicans and the Pentagon.
Lieberman refused to defend Democratic officials who were opposing
the inclusion of illegal ballots. Instead he said he would give
the benefit of the doubt to military ballots, and
called on Florida election officials to go back and take
another look at ballots that had been rejected two days
before.
Presidential candidate Gore was no less prostrate before the
military. He rejected the advice of campaign strategists who urged
him to challenge the illegal ballots. The Times quotes
Joe Sandler, who was the Democratic National Committees
general counsel, recalling how Gore explained his position:
I can give you his exact words. If I won this thing
by a handful of military ballots, I would be hounded by Republicans
and the press every day of my presidency and it wouldnt
be worth having.
Another Gore aide is quoting as saying, Gore got very
stuck on the notion that if he became president it was not in
the national interest that he have a relationship characterized
by his mistrust of the military.
These are extraordinary statements. They amount to the acceptance
of a military veto over the outcome of a national election and
the occupant of the White House.
The subordination of the military to civilian rule is a cardinal
principle of the US Constitution. The fact that this cornerstone
of democracy has become so eroded is a stark indication of the
decay of bourgeois democratic institutions in the US.
The Times report confirms the analysis of the 2000 election
made by the World Socialist Web Site: it was a watershed
event, marking a decisive break with the traditional forms of
rule of American capitalism. The details revealed in the Times
exposé underscore the enormous dangers facing the working
class. Its basic rights are threatened by a political system moving
inexorably in the direction of authoritarian rule.
The absence of any serious opposition within the political
establishment to the right-wing attack on democratic rights is
reflected in the media response to the Times report.
Consistent with their complicity in both the impeachment conspiracy
and the theft of the 2000 election, the major networks have given
virtually no coverage to the Times articles and the issues
they raise.
The Democrats have remained similarly silent. The last thing
they want is a public airing of the criminality that underlies
the Bush administration.
Nevertheless, the very fact that this story has appeared in
a leading publication of the establishment has far-reaching objective
significance. The Times report is only one example of a
growing genre of political post mortems on the stolen election
of 2000. In recent weeks numerous reports have appeared documenting
the widespread disenfranchisement of working class and minority
voters in Florida. Books have begun to appear indicting the Supreme
Court for its role in flouting democratic rights and handing the
election to Bush.
These publications reflect a deep-going crisis of political
rule in the US, a crisis that has been exacerbated by the installation
of a government by anti-democratic means. Seven months after Bushs
inauguration, the political establishment is unable to put to
rest questions about the legitimacy of his administration. Within
the ruling elite there is a gnawing fear that the breach with
democratic methods is discrediting the entire political system
and paving the way for the radicalization of broad layers of the
working population.
See Also:
Florida ballot review shows
voters preferred Gore
Media slants results to favor Bush
[28 May 2001]
Media-sponsored recount in
Florida slants results to legitimize Bush election
[20 April 2001]
US networks, Congress whitewash
media role in 2000 election
[14 March 2001]
US Commission on Civil Rights
charges voter disenfranchisement ... at heart of Bush
victory in Florida
[10 March 2001]
Florida presidential
recount: Bush campaign makes appeal to military and extreme right
[20 November 2000]
The world historical implications
of the political crisis in the United States
[6 February 2001]
Lessons from history:
the 2000 elections and the new "irrepressible conflict"
[11 December 2000]
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