From: pete-dNewsgroups: uk.gay-lesbian-biDate: Wednesday, December 20, 2000 3:33 PMSubject: US Election ResultsI had this e-mailed to me by a friend in the States and thought somepeople might be interested in what's doing the rounds.  I take noresponsibility for its accuracy or authenticity.Pete==== Beging Quoted Material ====How The Supreme Court Made Bush the President AscendantAn Article by Mark LevineQ: I'm not a lawyer and I don't understand the recent Supreme Courtdecision in Bush v. Gore. Can you explain it to me?A: Sure. I'm a lawyer. I read it. It says Bush wins, even if Gore got themost votes.Q: But wait a second. The US Supreme Court has to give a reason, right?A: Right.Q: So Bush wins because hand-counts are illegal?A: Oh no. Six of the justices (two-thirds majority) believed thehand-counts were legal and should be done.Q: Oh. So the justices did not believe that the hand-counts would find anylegal ballots?A. Nope. The five conservative justices clearly held (and all ninejustices agreed) "that punch card balloting machines can produce anunfortunate number of ballots which are not punched in a clean, completeway by the voter." So there are legal votes that should be counted butcan't be.Q: Oh. Does this have something to do with states' rights? Don'tconservatives love that?A: Generally yes. These five justices have held that the federalgovernment has no business telling a sovereign state university it can'tsteal trade secrets just because such stealing is prohibited by law. Nordoes the federal government have any business telling a state that itshould bar guns in schools. Nor can the federal government use the equalprotection clause to force states to take measures to stop violenceagainst women.Q: Is there an exception in this case?A: Yes, the Gore exception. States have no rights to have their own stateelections when it can result in Gore being elected President. Thisdecision is limited to only this situation.Q: C'mon. The Supremes didn't really say that. You're exaggerating.A: Nope. They held "Our consideration is limited to the presentcircumstances, or the problem of equal protection in election processesgenerally presents many complexities."Q: What complexities?A: They don't say.Q: I'll bet I know the reason. I heard Jim Baker say this. The votes can'tbe counted because the Florida Supreme Court "changed the rules of theelection after it was held." Right?A. Dead wrong. The US Supreme Court made clear that the Florida SupremeCourt did not change the rules of the election. But the US Supreme Courtfound the failure of the Florida Court to change the rules was wrong.Q: Huh?A: The Legislature declared that the only legal standard for counting voteis "clear intent of the voter." The Florida Court was condemned for notadopting a clearer standard.Q: I thought the Florida Court was not allowed to change the Legislature'slaw after the election.A: Right.Q: So what's the problem?A: They should have. The US Supreme Court said the Florida Supreme Courtshould have "adopt[ed] adequate statewide standards for determining whatis a legal vote"Q: I thought only the Legislature could "adopt" new law.A: Right.Q: So if the Court had adopted new standards, I thought it would have beenoverturned.A: Right. You're catching on.Q: If the Court had adopted new standards, it would have been overturnedfor changing the rules. And if it didn't, it's overturned for not changingthe rules. That means that no matter what the Florida Supreme Court did,legal votes could never be counted.A: Right. Next question.Q: Wait, wait. I thought the problem was "equal protection," that somecounties counted votes differently from others. Isn't that a problem?A: It sure is. Across the nation, we vote in a hodgepodge of systems.Some, like the optical-scanners in largely Republican-leaning countiesrecord 99.7% of the votes. Some, like the punchcard systems in largelyDemocratic-leaning counties record only 97% of the votes. So approximately3% of Democratic votes are thrown in the trash can.Q: Aha! That's a severe equal-protection problem!!!A: No it's not. The Supreme Court wasn't worried about the 3% ofDemocratic ballots thrown in the trashcan in Florida. That "complexity"was not a problem.Q: Was it the butterfly ballots that violated Florida law and tricked morethan 20,000 Democrats to vote for Buchanan or Gore and Buchanan.A: Nope. The Supreme Court has no problem believing that Buchanan got hishighest, best support in a precinct consisting of a Jewish old age homewith Holocaust survivors, who apparently have changed their mind aboutHitler.Q: Yikes. So what was the serious equal protection problem?A: The problem was neither the butterfly ballot nor the 3% of Democrats(largely African-American) disenfranchised. The problem is that somewhatless than .005% of the ballots may have been determined under slightlydifferent standards because judges sworn to uphold the law and doing theirbest to accomplish the legislative mandate of "clear intent of the voter"may have a slightly opinion about the voter's intent.Q: Hmmm. OK, so if those votes are thrown out, you can still count thevotes where everyone agrees the voter's intent is clear?A: Nope.Q: Why not?A: No time.Q: No time to count legal votes where everyone, even Republicans, agreethe intent is clear? Why not?A: Because December 12 was yesterday.Q: Is December 12 a deadline for counting votes?A: No. January 6 is the deadline. In 1960, Hawaii's votes weren't counteduntil January 4.Q: So why is December 12 important?A: December 12 is a deadline by which Congress can't challenge theresults.Q: What does the Congressional role have to do with the Supreme Court?A: Nothing.Q: But I thought ---A: The Florida Supreme Court had earlier held it would like to completeits work by December 12 to make things easier for Congress. The UnitedStates Supreme Court is trying to help the Florida Supreme Court out byforcing the Florida court to abide by a deadline that everyone agrees isnot binding.Q: But I thought the Florida Court was going to just barely have the votescounted by December 12.A: They would have made it, but the five conservative justices stopped therecount last Saturday.Q: Why?A: Justice Scalia said some of the counts may not be legal.Q: So why not separate the votes into piles, indentations for Gore,hanging chads for Bush, votes that everyone agrees went to one candidateor the other so that we know exactly how Florida voted before determiningwho won? Then, if some ballots (say, indentations) have to be thrown out,the American people will know right away who won Florida.A. Great idea! The US Supreme Court rejected it. They held that suchcounts would likely to produce election results showing Gore won andGore's winning would cause "public acceptance" and that would "cast[] acloud" over Bush's "legitimacy" that would harm "democratic stability."Q: In other words, if America knows the truth that Gore won, they won'taccept the US Supreme Court overturning Gore's victory?A: Yes.Q: Is that a legal reason to stop recounts? or a political one?A: Let's just say in all of American history and all of American law, thisreason has no basis in law. But that doesn't stop the five conservativesfrom creating new law out of thin air.Q: Aren't these conservative justices against judicial activism?A: Yes, when liberal judges are perceived to have done it.Q: Well, if the December 12 deadline is not binding, why not count thevotes?A: The US Supreme Court, after admitting the December 12 deadline is notbinding, set December 12 as a binding deadline at 10 p.m. on December 12.Q: Didn't the US Supreme Court condemn the Florida Supreme Court forarbitrarily setting a deadline?A: Yes.Q: But, but --A: Not to worry. The US Supreme Court does not have to follow laws it setsfor other courts.Q: So who caused Florida to miss the December 12 deadline?A: The Bush lawyers who first went to court to stop the recount, therent-a-mob in Miami that got paid Florida vacations for intimidatingofficials, and the US Supreme Court for stopping the recountQ: So who is punished for this behavior?A: Gore, of course.Q: Tell me this Florida's laws are unconstitutional?A: YesQ: And the laws of 50 states that allow votes to be cast or counteddifferently are unconstitutional?A: Yes. And 33 states have the "clear intent of the voter" standard thatthe US Supreme Court found was illegal in FloridaQ: Then why aren't the results of 33 states thrown out?A: Um. Because, um, the Supreme Court doesn't say.Q: But if Florida's certification includes counts expressly declared bythe US Supreme Court to be unconstitutional, we don't know who really wonthe election there, right?A: Right. Though a careful analysis by the Miami Herald shows Gore wonFlorida by about 20,000 votes (excluding the butterfly ballot errors)Q: So, what do we do, have a re-vote? throw out the entire state? countunder a single uniform standard?A: No. We just don't count the votes that favor Gore.Q: That's completely bizarre! That sounds like rank political favoritism!Did the justices have any financial interest in the case?A: Scalia's two sons are both lawyers working for Bush. Thomas's wife iscollecting applications for people who want to work in the Bushadministration.Q: Why didn't they recuse themselves?A: If either had recused himself, the vote would be 4-4, and the FloridaSupreme Court decision allowing recounts would have been affirmed.Q: I can't believe the justices acted in such a blatantly political way.A: Read the opinions for yourself:http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/supremecourt/00-949_dec12.pdf (December 9stay stopping the recount)http://www.supremecourtus.gov/opinions/00pdf/00-949.pdf (December 12opinion)Q: So what are the consequences of this?A: The guy who got the most votes in the US and in Florida and under ourConstitution (Al Gore) will lose to America's second choice who won theall important 5-4 Supreme Court vote.Q: I thought in a democracy, the guy with the most votes wins.A: True, in a democracy. But America is not a democracy. In America in2000, the guy with the most US Supreme Court votes wins.Q: So what will happen to the Supreme Court when Bush becomes President.A: He will appoint more justices in the mode of Thomas and Scalia toensure that the will of the people is less and less respected. Soonlawless justices may constitute 6-3 or even 7-2 on the court.Q: Is there any way to stop this?A: YES. No federal judge can be confirmed without a vote in the Senate. It takes 60 votes to break a filibuster. If only 41 of the 50 DemocraticSenators stand up to Bush and his Supremes and say that they will notapprove a single judge appointed by him until a President can bedemocratically elected in 2004, the judicial reign of terror can end, andone day we can hope to return to the rule of law.Q: What do I do now?A: Email this to everyone you know, and write or call your senator,reminding him that Gore beat Bush by several hundred thousand votes (threetimes Kennedy's margin over Nixon) and that you believe that VOTERS ratherthan JUDGES should determine who wins an election by counting every vote.And to protect our judiciary from overturning the will of the people, youwant them to confirm NO NEW JUDGES until 2004 when a president is finallychosen by most of the American people.Mark H. LevineAttorney at LawMarkLevineEsq@aol.com