rfunk: (phone)
  • 08:45 what a difference four years makes. #
  • 09:12 disappointed: California enshrines discrimination in its constitution. #
  • 12:24 Ohio made me happy. Indiana made me amazed. California made me confused. #
rfunk: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] rfunk at 11:23pm on 14/12/2004 under , , , , ,
Remember when I mentioned that there would be a lawsuit about the Ohio vote?

Now you can go read the 93-page lawsuit, and the related motion for injunction against the Electors submitting their votes.
Or go read a summary at dKos.

The detailed allegations include both "traditional" methods of vote fraud, and new methods using electronic voting and vote-counting machines. The bottom line is that according to these calculations, Kerry should have won Ohio by at least 142,537 votes, rather than losing it by 119,000.

I doubt this will actually change the Ohio result (Eris will be busy if it does), but there's a thin sliver of hope here. At the very least it will publicize the major problems we had this year, and is likely to begin Ken Blackwell's downfall.
rfunk: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] rfunk at 12:13pm on 12/12/2004 under , , , , ,
I figured that Ken Blackwell (both Ohio campaign chair for Bush and in charge of voting for Ohio) had probably manipulated the Ohio vote somehow, but I never expected that we'd get this close to proving it....

First, of course, were the hours-long lines in Democratic-leaning areas such as parts of Franklin county. Everyone thought it was was just a symptom of high turnout, but it turned out that not only did those precincts have fewer voting machines than in 2000, but there were machines left unused in storage. In addition, elections officials were more concerned with getting the machines to the polls by the end of the day than by the beginning of the day. (The Columbus Free Press seems to be the best, though not the most objective, source for this information and continuing coverage. The Columbus Dispatch also has a story.)

But that's old news now.

The Greens and Libertarians showed the value of third parties by leading the fight for an Ohio recount. (See votecobb.org for more information.) Apparently they were getting close to something, triggering a coverup effort from Blackwell....

(I'm getting all this through Daily Kos diaries, in case it's not obvious from the following links. Be sure to read the comments for further information, and follow the links to primary sources.)

Ohio Election Investigation Thwarted by Surprise Blackwell Order:
On Friday in Greene county, recounters were told they had to stop their count because Blackwell had locked down the ballots, which were no longer considered public record. However, Ohio law requires all election records to be made available for public inspection and copying, makes it a crime for any employee of the Board of Elections to prohibit any person from inspecting the election records, and defines violation of these provisions as election fraud.

Ohio Poll Records Left in Unlocked Building
Then Friday night, despite the lockdown order, the ballots and related records were left in an unlocked building, and there was apparently evidence that people were in there overnight.

And finally (for now)....
Monday morning a lawsuit will be filed relating to the Ohio election problems.

Remember, it was the coverup that brought Nixon down, not the original crime. This time the coverup may only bring down Blackwell, but it's a start.

(Oh yeah, at noon today there were "You Stole My Vote" protests at all the state capitals.)

Update: New Study: More Absentee Votes than Voters in Ohio

Update 2: Keith Olbermann at MSNBC is on the story.

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