Posted on 11/16/2001 1:04:36 PM PST by Mr. Mulliner
The Democrats' Favorite Conspiracy Theory
FrontPageMagazine.com | November 14, 2001
THE DISPUTE SURROUNDING the 2000 presidential election should have been over in the days immediately following the vote, when a legally mandated machine recount found-for the second time-that George W. Bush had won. Barring that, it should have been over five weeks later, when the U.S. Supreme Court put an end to Al Gore's efforts to rig a manual recount in four of Florida's most heavily Democratic counties. And it certainly should have been over in January, when President George W. Bush's inauguration made the entire squabble moot.
But the controversy never died at any of those occasions, and it's not about to die now, either, despite the media analysis of uncounted ballots that found Bush, once again, to be the winner. While Democratic operatives are holding their fire for the time being, there's little doubt that come 2004-especially if Gore is their candidate-we will once more hear about the "selected, not elected" president.
Former Clinton moneyman and current Democratic National Chairman Terry McAuliffe made clear in his February acceptance speech that as long as he's at the helm, election 2000 will remain a key Democratic rallying point. "You know this," he told his party faithful, "if Katherine Harris, Jeb Bush, Jim Baker and the Supreme Court hadn't tampered with the results, Al Gore would be president, George Bush would be back in Austin, and John Ashcroft would be home reading Southern Partisan magazine."
Today, he sounds a less belligerent tone. With the nation at war and its commander-in-chief buoyed by massive popular support, McAuliffe knows better than publicly to denounce Bush as a pretender to the throne. In response to the latest recount, McAuliffe remarked, "I have consistently said, George Bush has been sworn in. We all support him. We support him now more than ever."
Supporting the president in a time of war, however, is very different from saying he was rightfully elected. And it's no accident that McAuliffe chose to say that Bush "has been sworn in," and not that he won. Nor has he taken back his uninformed February remarks, which have since been proved conclusively wrong.
For all his talk of "supporting" Bush, McAuliffe continues to hang on to the stolen-election theory. "If you counted all the overvotes," he quipped, "they say that Vice President Gore would have won."
That may be true, but it's also irrelevant.
Back during the five-week post-election legal battle, no one, neither the Gore campaign nor the Florida Supreme Court, called for a tally of the overvotes (ballots that showed markings for more than one candidate) because discerning the voter's true intent would have been prohibitively difficult and legally untenable. They asked only for a manual recount of the so-called undervotes, ballots that machines read as denoting no candidate whatsoever. And the media's survey has found that under any undervote recount-statewide or in Gore's selected counties only, loose standards or strict-Gore still would have lost.
All of which goes to show that election 2000 was not ultimately decided by Katherine Harris, Jeb Bush, Jim Baker or the U.S. Supreme Court, but by Florida voters. Even if the U.S. Supreme Court hadn't overturned the Florida Supreme Court's ordered recount, Bush would still be president.
In other words, election 2000 should be, once again, over. But Democrats are holding on to the politically useful myth of Gore's denied presidency so that they can bring it back as a weapon in 2004-facts be damned.
Following the announcement of the media's analysis, Gore issued a magnanimous-sounding press release, suggesting that he was ready, as Democrats liked to say during the Clinton impeachment battle, to move on. "As I said on Dec. 13th of last year, we are a nation of laws and the presidential election of 2000 is over. And of course, right now, our country faces a great challenge as we seek to successfully combat terrorism. I fully support President Bush's efforts to achieve that goal."
If there's a lesson to be learned from the Clinton years, it's that the words of Clintonites must be parsed very carefully. Gore's press release proves it.
Noting that the election is over is merely to state the old and the obvious. True magnanimity would have been for Gore to admit that he lost it. Instead, Gore chose to say only that "we are a nation of laws," not that the law is just, or that Bush won the White House fair and square.
Gore, who has been spending an inordinate amount of time giving speeches in Iowa and New Hampshire lately, knows that the charge of Bush's ill-begotten victory resonates with his party base. He won't give up such an effective campaign ploy that easily.
For Democratic partisans, the theory that Bush "stole" the presidency, or that it was conferred upon him by a vast, right-wing Supreme Court conspiracy, is an article of faith. As such, it's not subject to reason or open to negotiation. Contradictory evidence is merely a trifling inconvenience best left ignored.
The dispute surrounding the 2000 election is far from over. The Democratic Party is the party of victims, and the newly bearded Gore remains its victim-in-chief.
Who said that now famous line, "Tell a lie often enough and people will believe it"? Seems to be the Dems strategy: just keep saying the election was stolen and remind people through various ways and when the next election rolls around, enough people might be conditioned to believe it and respond.
However, it will serve to stoke the fires of hatred in their base and as a money-raising tool (as it most certainly would have for us, had the re-counts gone Gore's way).
That became obvious right after the Florida coup attempt - when a widely-made proposal to switch to touch-screen voting machines produced lawsuits against Philly's adoption of them. There, disability-rights activists claimed that such machines were inaccessible to disabled voters!
This is my concern, too. They, and enough people in the press, will keep that myth alive. Just as the left claims that the Rosenbergs were not spies, that Alger Hiss never committed perjury, and that Reagan was wrong to fight the Soviet Union.
Assuming you were around here at Free Republic back during the recount, you'll recall clearly how much anger there was and how many people were voicing their determination to fight vote fraud and bring about reform. It seemed like a great sign that change was ahead.
But what has happened since then? Very little reform, although some changes have been implemented in some places. What's worse, though, is that the Democrats have commandeered this issue and taken it away from the Republicans. I guess because Bush won the election, it became too much to hope that people would keep beating the drums about the Dems dirty tricks, but the Dems are sure beating the drums now.
I'm not sure that I understand your question. I think coach potatoes will remain couch potatoes. The only people in America who care about this "stolen" election are die-hard Democrats, who are already going to vote Democrat. I do not think any "undecided" will lean Democrat, based on this flimsy evidence of election "stealing."
Sorry, but that is wishful thinking. Over the 8 evil years, I watched ridiculous statements come out of DNC and laughed until the media and the spin doctors made it "true" to the sheeple. Sad but true.
Now take your average person who considers themself well informed and in the know and see if they know that. Our media makes it breathtakingly easy for Democrats to get out their talking points and Republicans have hope for a few editorials to go their way.
The same situation applies for the "undervote". This is a no-vote situation; the voter left all candidates blank. How can the voter's "intent" be determined other than that he may well have "intended" not to cast a vote in that particular race?
Am I missing something, here?
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