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The Democrats' Favorite Conspiracy Theory
Frontpage ^ | November 14, 2001 | Chris Weinkopf

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.



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To: Queen Elizabeth of Iowa
If I have my facts wrong in my Reply #20, I would really appreciate some FREEPER enlightenment on the subject. Am I defining "overvotes" and "undervotes" properly? If so, how can voter "intent" be devined without a crystal ball in either situation?

I know "overvotes" can also be produced by the classic vote-tampering technique known as the "wire" in which a sharp wire is inserted into a stack of ballots in the hole for the desired candidate.

21 posted on 11/16/2001 1:07:00 PM PST by Irene Adler
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To: Singapore_Yank
That was an excellent piece of information that John Lott wrote about. The main point that I remember from it is that black Republicans were about 50 times more likely to be disenfranchised by having their vote thrown out than black Democrats. Now take your average person who considers themself well informed and in the know and see if they know that

This is always my biggest concern. It is amazing how ignorant the average American is. Most people I know have no idea what went on in Florida. No idea at all. Their concept is that the Supreme Court ruled in Bush's favor. They have no clue why, no knowledge of what occured before that decision, and no clue why there was a controversy. They had a higher level of awareness last December but have not bothered to think about it since then.

These people are just waiting to be spoon-fed any propoganda the DNC and press will feed them.

Where is the RNC in presenting this stuff? Where are the RNC in making the argument that these 'overvotes' were spoiled balllots and probably the result of ballot tampering on the part of Democrats? I have'nt heard anything from the RNC. That fact alone has a smell to it. Why won't the RNC talk about it?

22 posted on 11/16/2001 1:07:06 PM PST by SmartEnough
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To: Singapore_Yank
I've been spreading a conspiracy theory around left wing sites such as Indymedia which is getting some traction. Anyone want to join in, the game is this: Pose as a Dominican. Say the new mayor of NYC, Billionaire Bloomberg, had his moneymen in the Mossad take down Flight 587 to send a message to people of color in the city to shut up. Point out that he is going to blame the crash on Muslims. A certain segment of the left wing menagerie eats this stuff up.
23 posted on 11/16/2001 1:07:07 PM PST by LarryLied
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Comment #24 Removed by Moderator

To: Yehudi
What were the rules in place on the Monday before Election 2000?

By those rules, George W. Bush won a close race, despite the disenfranchising of 1500 military voters and the early call that cost him at least 8,000 votes (by the admission of Bob Beckel).

Sorry, but Bush won. The far left needs to go put some ice on their bruised ego.

25 posted on 11/16/2001 1:16:28 PM PST by hchutch
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To: hchutch
"It was either Hitler or Goebbels that used that line."

Actually, the originator was Lenin. But Goebbels got a lot of mileage out of it, as well.

26 posted on 11/16/2001 1:16:29 PM PST by okie01
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To: okie01
That sure puts the Dems in the position of following the advice of some shady characters, to say the least.
27 posted on 11/16/2001 1:16:39 PM PST by hchutch
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To: hchutch
"That sure puts the Dems in the position of following the advice of some shady characters, to say the least."

The Dems owe a great deal to their mentor, Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, and the precepts of dialectical materialism. More than anything, they have adopted Lenin's signal assertion:

"Everything is political!"

This charge, of course, places the political agenda ahead of all other considerations -- be they economic, social, scientific, educational, military or whatever. In my view, the leftists' politicization of every aspect of human life and affairs is their most perverse contribution.

By asserting that "everything is political", they have poisoned everything...

28 posted on 11/16/2001 1:17:03 PM PST by okie01
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To: Singapore_Yank
I don't think the dems can hope to use the Gore got robbed theme to appeal to swing voters. Even people who believe that Bush "won on a technicality," as I think one of the poll questions goes on this issue, won't care come 2004. They will care how Bush has done. If Bush is successful, he will win a second term. If he isn't, he won't. That simple. Of course, if he isn't successful and doesn't win a second term, then the dems will spin and spin that the reason he didn't is because he was "illegitimate." To the victors go the chance to write history, after all.

I do think that the dems willl use the Gore got robbed theme to motivate their base, both in 2002 and in 2004. I don't see how that can be avoided. Blacks are by and large still livid about this and will remain so. But even if Gore had lost "fair and square" in their minds, the democratic base was still going to be highly motivated, I think, because of Gore's win in the popular vote. About that, I've got to say how surprisingly wimpy Gore was on that score. I think that if I had been just barely on the losing end of the electoral college in the same murky way, but had won the popular vote, I would have more explicitly used my popular vote win to justify the recount. Plus I would have shopped for faithless electors. I would have gone all out to use every tool at my disposal, even if it meant discrediting the electoral college. That's what I really expected Gore to do. But he whimped out.

I suppose that if the dems nominate that stiff Gore again in 2004 -- though I'd be really surprised, since the party heavyweightss think he should have clobbered Bush -- his mere presence will raise the issue as "subtext" as loonies like to say and little will be directly said about it. (though you can imagine some journalist asking Gore in a debate whether he believes that Bush was legitimately elected. and Gore parsing his words too too carefully)

29 posted on 11/16/2001 10:30:16 PM PST by leftiesareloonie
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