Home > My Election 2004 Bad Dream

My Election 2004 Bad Dream

by Open-Publishing - Wednesday 27 April 2005
5 comments

Edito Elections-Elected USA

On a recent flight to Nashville, I sat next to a man who asked what I was writing. Preparing a talk, I told him, for a conference of people sharing evidence that the 2004 presidential election was stolen. Without missing a beat, he asked. "Isn’t that next door to the convention on UFO sightings?"

I wasn’t surprised. We’ve been painted as conspiracy theorists and worse by Democrats and Republicans alike, and even the liberal arm of the press has steered clear of this issue. But when I arrived at Jefferson Street Baptist Church in Nashville, my doubts about the election were reinforced by a group of sober professionals, none who seemed overtly loony.

I met David Griscom, a retired physics prof who spent months with colleague John Brakey poring over election tapes, signature rosters and "consecutive number registers" from Brakey’s Tucson home precinct.

They audited and verified, one by one, the 895 votes in the precinct and found: 12 innocent and unsuspecting voters who had their names duplicated on the roster and their votes for Bush counted twice. Twenty-two "undervotes" where the machine had failed to register a preference for president, and these had been dutifully and meticulously converted to 22 votes for Bush.

The "Republican" and "Democratic" co-directors of the polling place were a local fundamentalist preacher and his wife. Thirty-nine of their parishioners from another precinct had cast provisional ballots, which were (illegally) converted to regular ballots and passed through, all 39 for Bush.

I met Richard Hayes Phillips, a geologist from New Hampshire who was invited to Ohio to study the integrity of the vote, and realized that a complete inventory of lost and miscounted votes was needed. To date, Phillips has analyzed 15 of Ohio’s 88 counties, and by his most conservative estimate has found 101,000 uncounted Kerry votes - 136,000 is the margin by which Bush officially defeated Kerry.

I heard Clint Curtis talk about working in 2001 as a programmer for Yang Enterprises in Florida. He was assigned to a meeting with State Senate Speaker Tom Feeney, who asked to have a program written into the software that controls voting machines so that the totals could be manipulated without leaving a trace. Curtis, the whistleblower, is now unemployed. Feeney, the politician, is now the U.S. representative from Florida’s 24th Congressional district.

I was inspired to hear the travails of Ohio lawyer Cliff Arnebeck. After the Green Party raised $200,000 and obtained authorization for a recount in Ohio, Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell staged a charade in which every state rule about the conduct of the recount was thrown out, and two hand-picked precinct captains emerged from behind locked doors to report that yes, indeed the numbers were exactly right and all was hunky dory.

Arnebeck was lead attorney in a lawsuit to expose this sham, and get a real recount. The suit was dismissed by Supreme Court Justice Thomas Moyer, who ruled on the case despite the fact that his own re-election was part of the challenge. Arnebeck has continued to pursue the case while he fights for his legal life: State Attorney General Jim Petro has brought an action to discipline Arnebeck for bringing a frivolous suit that wastes the precious time of the Ohio court.

Now I’m safely returned from Planet Nashville, back home in the land of ABC-CBS-NBC-FOX-AP. I find it reassuring to remember that if any of this had really happened, the Democrats in Congress would be screaming about it. I’d read about it on the front page, and it would be all over the network news. Yes, I can be sure that Nashville was just a bad dream. The reality is that President Bush won the election, and it’s time to move on. Time to move on. It was all just a dream. Yes, it’s time to move on.

Josh Mitteldorf teaches math and statistics at Temple University.

© 2005 Philadelphia Daily News

http://www.philly.com/mld/philly/11489971.htm

Forum posts

  • My husband is a computer programmer. He thinks in numbers the way I do in words. He is also no raving lefty, and he just doesn’t believe the numbers. His gut told him on election night that it didn’t feel mathematically right, the way the polls and the results collided. If it were just me, I’d call it wishful thinking, but I believe his gut on this one. And the new maxim should be, "You CAN fool all of the people all of the time!"

    Unless there is a really big backlash against this takeover, we will never see victory again in a close election....

  • Yes, it’s a little discouraging, but keep this in mind: Nixon was a lot smarter than Chimpster but he was resigned in 1973 over less serious allegations.

    If there were gay hookers romping through the Nixon White House they at least stayed out of the press room

  • I wasn’t there, but I expect the convention on UFO sightings was next door to the WMD convention.

    Any body who say the electronic voting machines were not jiggered is a complete idiot or a liar.

  • Electronic voting machines are a bad idea. Paper ballots only, please.

    Much is made of the disparity between exit polls and poll results. Little is made of the endless polls run in the six-month period before the election. In almost all of these polls, Bush had a narrow lead. Kerry hardly ever had a larger lead than the margin of error (except for the bounce he received after the Democrat convention). Are we to believe that all of those polls irrelevant?

    By the way, just based on style alone, anybody who thinks Tennessee would go for Kerry over Bush doesn’t know much about Tennessee. (Kerry tried to woo Southern voters by asking "Who among us does not like NASCAR?". Yuk yuk, snicker.)