Time Mag: Deja Vu At The Florida Polls?
from Time Magazine
And to answer the misleading gibberish title? No.
Monday, Jun. 14, 2004 Issue
After the 2000 presidential-election debacle in Florida, state and county election officials there agreed to examine whether the names of more than 19,000 people should be restored to the voter rolls because most of them may have been mistakenly identified as convicted felons and thus ineligible to vote. (In Florida, convicted felons must apply to get back their voting rights after their sentences are complete, though few manage to do so.) Those disenfranchised voters took on increased significance when Bush won the state by just 537 votes. Have the snafus been fixed? Florida Secretary of State Glenda Hood has now told county supervisors that 47,000 more names are likely to be purged from the voter rolls this year, and election watchdogs fear that Florida is poised to repeat the mistakes of 2000 on a much larger scale.
The onus is on the felon to have his/her voting rights re-established. That the 19,000 felons dropped is in question is merely that. Re-instating en masse would also abrogate state law. Donât buy the whine. Prove they belong or STFU.
Hood argues that the criteria for removing people from the rolls are more stringent than they were in 2000 and that supervisors are now required by law to inform those named. "New safeguards assure that error rates will be kept to a minimum," Hoodâs spokeswoman says. But critics say the state is using the same flawed database that misidentified so many voters in 2000 and has done little to improve its accuracy. Hood staunchly denies that politics is at play, but her critics point out that almost a third of those listed reside in the heavily Democratic South Florida counties of Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach. Polls show that Democratic contender John Kerry and President Bush are running neck and neck in the state, where the Presidentâs brother Jeb is Governor.
Note that the database is allegedly flawed - here Time states it as fact. Iâm so dizzy! And big surprise, heavily Donk Dade has a disproportionate number of people who are dropped for the myraid possible reasons? F**kinâ Duh.
The chads may hit the fan this week when Floridaâs 67 county elections supervisors meet in Key West and debate how to handle Hoodâs purge list of 47,000. Confirming the listâs accuracy is now their responsibility, and some elections supervisors are eager to avoid a replay of 2000. "We already found one person [on the list] whose [criminal] charges had later been reduced to a misdemeanor," says a G.O.P. supervisor. Given what happened in 2000, he adds, "Iâm going to err on the side of the voter this time."
So there are convictions, deaths, expired registrations, out of state emigrations, etc. for another 47,000 now ex-voters. So? Sounds like it will be handled at the local level, which makes sense. Much sound and conspiracy-ish fury - but not a single fact. Oh, yeah, there was ONE voter confirmed to belong on the list, Lessee, 19 + 47 = 66,000 - 1 = 65,999 drops. Hang this, Chad. Lol, much ado about nothing.
Posted by: .com 2004-06-07 |