|
|
|||
|
11/21/00
4:20 p.m. By NRs John J. Miller & Ramesh Ponnuru |
|||
|
There were around 187,000 registered non-voters in the area. Assuming that the 15 percent who were discouraged from voting by the networks would have voted in roughly the same proportion as the registered voters who just weren't going to vote, period, Bush's margin would have increased by 11,500. (Actually, 11,500.5 11,500 votes and a dimpled chad for Bush?) These voters, according to JMA and to other Republicans who have taken legal action on their behalf, were disenfranchised." No, they weren't. Nobody stopped them from voting. When considering the ballots cast by confused voters, conservatives have made the point before that elections are not won by the candidate whom a plurality of voters preferred, but by the candidate for whom a plurality of voters actually cast ballots. If anyone's to blame for those 11,500 missing Bush voters, it's those voters themselves. There is no end to the factors that might have "unfairly" influenced their vote or non-vote. (E.g., the excessive coverage of a 24-year-old drunk-driving arrest.) Voting is, strictly speaking, an irrational business; the odds of an individual's vote actually deciding the outcome of an election are exceedingly small, even in a tight race like the one in question. When people vote, it's generally because they feel a civic duty to do so rather than to come up with after-the-fact excuses for their failure to do so.
Hand Jive But don't count on it. Here's something the Sentinel doesn't point out: More than 5,000 ballots in the three counties have been set aside because workers couldn't agree on whether or not they should count. The final authority on how these votes are counted will turn out be the Democrat-controlled county canvassing boards, unless some judge reigns them in. Under these circumstances, it's possible that Gore would pass Bush's total, even if the governor gets an additional boost from military ballots that were initially thrown out. Gore is benefiting from the stories running today about how he might lose the hand count. It makes the hand count look fairer, as though by insisting on it Gore is merely taking his chances. The truth is that Democrats don't want to take a p.r. hit from counting dimpled ballots if they can win without them. But if that's what it takes to win, they'll do it.
The Stupid Party No More!
On the Site |
|||
|
|
|||
| If you would like to receive the Washington Bulletin via e-mail, please send an e-mail message to majordomo@us.net. The first line in the body of the message should read: "subscribe washingtonbulletin". In order to ensure that you are not accidentally subscribed, you will receive a reply message with a confirmation number, to which you must reply to complete the subscription process. To unsubscribe leave the subject line blank and have the first line in the body of the message read: "unsubscribe washingtonbulletin". | |||
|