I'm speaking of November 7th itself. I happened to be in Bradenton, FL on November 7th 2000 for (among other things) a meeting with the city officials about a construction project.
You were also speaking of the entire state, you said "Gore sent teams of lawyers into each Florida county to challenge the military vote" but you supported that by giving a personal account of what you saw and were told in Bradenton, FL. So, whatever it is you witnessed of course happened throughout the entire state, because we're talking 'a hell of a lot of voter suppression' right?
The letter of the Florida Code (which the lawyers brought) required that all absentee ballots have postmarks, but Florida had previously signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Justice Department after being sued for just this in previous elections.
Gore resisted Lieberman and his advisers and refused to challenge the count of overseas military absentee ballots in his lawsuit contesting the election results. I personally think trying to
reject military absentee ballots due to not being postmarked is as sleazy as going to court in an attempt to get unsigned or undated ballots
accepted. Neither side should be allowed to pick and choose what rules they follow, and that's certainly what both were doing. On November 7th anyway.
Consequently the state had been accepting military ballots without postmarks, but in small counties the election officials weren't cognizant of this rule and when challenged by well-prepared teams of lawyers (or perhaps just when offered an opportunity to help their guy) they folded. *snip*
From your article:
"Canvassing boards meeting Friday night and Saturday in all 67 Florida counties threw out 1,420 absentee ballots from overseas without opening the envelopes, or 39 percent of the total, according to an unofficial tally by The Associated Press. Reasons for the disqualifications
included missing postmarks. Of those that were counted, 1,380 were for Mr. Bush and 750 were for Vice President Al Gore, widening Mr. Bush's overall lead in this state to 930 votes out of almost six million cast."
So an average of 21 ballots per county were tossed for various reasons. You don't know how many of them were disqualified by missing postmarks, but don't want to address all the other ways an absentee ballot can be rejected. Can't disrupt your narrative of Gore and his marauding lawyers now can we?
Small town officials? No,
canvassing boards are used for this, and they usually include an election supervisor, judges, county commissioners, maybe their Chair, etc and are subject to Open Meeting laws. I think your notion of small town officials, possibly being corrupt or ignorant of law, just being cowed by them big city lawyers with fancy words is pretty funny. I guess the judges down there are proper Barney Fifes, with as little election law knowledge as spine huh?
I know this can't tarnish your mental image of Gore the saint or compare with a glowing opinion piece from almost a decade after the fact, but it needs to be pointed out.
Ahh, more of the '
don't see things my way, you must love the guy!' tripe from you, classic! Yes, not agreeing with 15 year old election talking points or agreeing with your warped view on what constitutes voter suppression, clearly it points to a mancrush I have for
Al Gore. The guy I've bashed for years for being a rich little Senator's son who went to Vietnam not to fight, but to take pictures...while accompanied by bodyguards. And yes, quite silly of me to quote a man who was personally involved with the event that relates directly to what we're talking about. I guess I should have played along and considered Gore responsible for everything that Lieberman had said and done back then.
'A hell of a lot of voter suppression' still not found. A sleazy story, sure, but one that ultimately indicates less about the dems and more about your difficulties with those things called
scale and
scope.
I appreciate you trying all the same though, kudos.