Election 20C ENNSYLVANIA I A T ELECTION 1 JVJ V V I I RESULTS SENATE Rick Santorum (R) 2,465,412 Ron Klink (D) 2,134,734 HOUSE District. 1 Robert Brady (D) 147,959 Steven Kush (R) 20,270 Chaka Fattah (D) 175,512 Dlstd.ct..3 Robert Borski (D) 129,838 Charles Dougherty (R) 58,712 District 4 Melissa Hart (R) 145,348 Terry Van Horne (D) 100,945 District, 5 John Peterson (R) 147,425 District 6 Tim Holden (D) 136,663 Thomas Kopel (R) 68,468 District 7 Curt Weldon (R) 171,670 Peter Lennon (D) 93,655 QMtiQtd Jim Greenwood (R) 153,779 Ronald Strouse (D) 100,520 District 9 Bud Shuster (R) Unopposed District 10 Don Sherwood (R) Patrick Casey (D) District 11 Paul Kanjorski (D) Stephen Urban(R) District 12 John Murtha (D) Bill Choby (R) PiStrifiU.2 Joseph Hoeffel (D) 142,276 Stewart Greenleaf(R) 122,931 District 14 William Coyne (D) Unopposed PiStrigt 15 Pat Toomey (R) 117,928 Ed O’Brien(D) 103,269 DMfi.Gt..l6 Joseph Pitts (R) 161,653 Bob Yorczyk(D) 79,674 District 17 George Gekas (R) 166,086 Leslye Hess Herrmann(D)66,l24 District 18 Mike Doyle (D) Craig Stephens (R) District 1.8 Tod Platts (R) Jeff Sanders (D) District 2Q Frank Mascara (D) Ronald Davis (R) District 21 Phil English (R) Marc Flitter (D) Florida flip-flop rattles television analysis The presidential race that for weeks had been described as too close to call was all of that when the television networks began their election night coverage Tuesday. As a politically riveting television drama unfolded, state by state, it turned out that the networks didn’t know as much as they thought about the heart of their election night coverage: exit polling data. Shortly before 9 p.m., just as the electoral momentum seemed to be building for Demo cratic Vice President AI Gore, the networks reversed their earlier projection that Gore would win Florida and its 25 electoral votes. Two hours after being placed in Gore column, the state was declared too close to call. Sud denly the electoral vote balance tilted to Bush. “We just don’t trust the information we’re getting out of Florida.” said CNN’s Judy Woodruff, not mentioning the credibility of other exit polling data from other states. "There’s nothing more delightful than Officials saly more than 19,000 ballots were disqualified in Palm 124,151 111,879 130,780 66,450 separating Gore from Re publican George W. Bush The confusing ballot layout in Palm Beach County that some in * he or ‘ ginal Florida v ° t ® claim led hundreds of Democratic partisans to mistakenly * a y ’ w recount Wl vote for Reform Party candidate Patrick Buchanan. determine the outcome of ’ the presidential election. "At first, they be lieved it was their own error," Henry Handler, the plaintiffs' attorney, told the Dow Jones News Service. "But they discovered later in the press accounts that they were not alone. They feel the ballot was so deceiving that they were disenfranchised." The new ballot layout so many Palm Beach County voters found troubling resembles a double-sided booklet. Some voters said that it featured so many names (10 presidential can didates and space for a write-in) and that its circles and arrows were arrayed in such a way that they still aren't sure for whom they voted. "I looked at it and looked at it and looked at it," Elise Richel, 68, recalled Wednesday, "and I went through the entire ballot and I said, "Did I do it right?’ I think I did it right. But it was so 143,547 55,541 WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. More than 19,000 ballots were disqualified on election night in Palm Beach County, election officials revealed Wednesday. The announcement came after three county voters filed a lawsuit calling for a revote here, alleging that the county punch-card ballot was so confusing that they mistakenly had voted for Reform Party candidate Patrick J. Buchanan instead of Vice President Gore. The election officials said that 19,120 bal lots from Palm Beach County had showed votes for more than one presidential candidate. Florida’s ‘overseas ballots’ could be worth their political 155,400 68,554 MIAMI —They are called "overseas ballots" and in every other election, the 2,000 or 3,000 votes received from Floridians living abroad had almost no statistical importance in the outcome of a presidential election. But suddenly, with George Bush leading Al Gore by less than 2,000 votes in Florida, absentee ballots cast by Gls, students, teach ers, missionaries, business people, diplomats and other people in far-flung lands could be worth their political weight in gold. "Who would have thought," exclaimed 167,443 61,039 144,476 80,146 134,325 86,838 by Tim Jones November 08, 2000 Chicago Tribune by Richard Lezin Jones November 09, 2000 Knight-Ridder Newspapers by Paul Brinkley Rogers November 09, 2000 Knight-Ridder Newspapers watching an election where you actually have to wait to see what vot< ing anal like Florida and then take it back... This really is an interference in democracy.” \ L hour. MSNBC projected page Waiting for the votes to be counted has been «—-y views of 5 million for the day. An anathema to modern-day election coverage, m-*-' early-afternoon report from the as television and newspapers have spent mil- online Drudge Report was headlined lions of dollars on polling and exit polling, “EARLY EXIT POLLS SHOW CLEAR all with the seeming intent of letting Ameri- WINNER!” The story focused on exit poll cans know the outcome before bedtime. results from Waltham, Mass., and West Hol- This Election Day stood as a testament to the proliferation of technology and the Internet as Americans tried to get an early read Those votes were nullified and not included in the count. Gore won the county by more than 110,000 votes, but the 3,407 votes for Buchanan were far more than he gar nered anywhere else in Florida, and nearly a fifth of his statewide total. They also outstrip the fewer than 2,000 votes Bush-voter Margaret Sohn, who is in San Jose, Costa Rica, and who mailed her ballot a week ago to Duval County. She said an other Florida resident in San Jose called her at 7 a.m. Wednesday bemoaning the fact he had not mailed his vote in time to help de cide the election. None of Florida's 67 counties know just how many of these ballots are still en route _ and elections officials might not know for sure until Friday Nov. 17, the mail-in dead line for overseas ballots. Many counties don't keep track of how many they've sent out and they don't know how many to expect back. About 2,300 were counted statewide in the 1996 election. on an election that poll after poll said was too close to call. Several news organizations said Internet records were broken as millions of Americans logged on to look up results and get other information that wasn’t being re ported on television. \. ABC News said visitors viewed \ nearly 13 million ABC Web pages by 4 m p.m., breaking the record of 10 million X set in September 1998 with the release \ of Independent Counsel Kenneth \ Starr’s report to Congress on Presi dent Clinton’s relationship with Monica Lewinsky. CNN was getting 10 mil- lion CNN Web page visits every lywood, Calif. Yahoo! said the bulk of its visitors came for election returns. The significance of the easy to do it wrong. I have to tell you, that ballot was so confusing." The Palm Beach County lawsuit filed by Delray Beach City Commissioner Alberta McCarthy, Delray chiropractor Andre Fladell and West Palm Beach homemaker Lillian Gaines added to the muddle already cre ated by the recount, the unknown number of absentee ballots still outstanding, and a shower of other allegations of voting irregularities around the state. "That ballot in Palm (Beach) County is re ally misleading," Democratic National Com mittee general chairman Edward G. Rendell said at a news conference in Philadelphia Wednesday, indicating that the party is pre pared to ask for a revote. "You go into court, have witnesses who say, "I didn't know what I was doing.' You show it to an expert who says Buchanan could not have gotten that many votes, and you ask every body to vote again. It's obviously a very ex treme remedy, we have to make a very strong case.... Clearly something went wrong. There's no way (Buchanan) got 3,600 votes there." Minnie Heimlich of Delray, Fla., agreed. "My neighbors are crying because their vote went to Pat Buchanan and they can't stand it," she said. “I could cry. I'm a grandmother... but I'm very alert, I'm wide awake," said Heimlich, who declined to give her age. "But some of my contemporaries have slowed up. They wouldn't have known if that hole was for Buchanan." Democratic Rep. Robert Wexler, whose dis trict included part of the county, produced a Further complicating the recount process is that in some counties, many overseas votes were counted on election night because they arrived before the polls closed. In others, they were not. To be valid, the ballots had to be post marked no later than Tuesday election day. In addition, they had to be mailed from a for eign post office or from a U.S. military post office overseas. Gls usually vote GOP, offi cials said. To complicate the picture even more, there is an additional overseas ballot category: "fed eral write-in ballots," Pat Hollarn, elections supervisor for Okaloosa County, said these are blank bal- Intemet as an information source was due in large part to the proliferation of computers. But the drama of the day was reserved for television, which offered an unusual and com pelling display of reality television. Like in a football game, the score shifted as the elec toral count moved west across the country Bush gained the early lead. When Gore was declared the winner in Florida, 1996 Repub lican nominee Bob Dole said, “This certainly makes it tough.” As the uncertainty over the fate of Pennsylvania’s electoral votes continued. NBC’s Tim Russert was reduced to using a magic marker on a vinyl board to explain to viewers how Vice President A 1 Gore could win the election without winning Pennsvl va Within minutes it became a moot point as the state was declared for Gore. The drama built as the night wore on. By 9:30. political commentator Mark Halpcnn. speaking on ABC, raised the prospect of vote count irregularities in several states. “I think the lawyers will want to at least take a look at it.” Halperin said. memorandum issued by Elections Supervisor Theresa LePore, a Democrat, around 5 p m on Election Day that hinted at the confusion among voters The memo told poll workers to remind all voters "that they are to vote only for one presi dential candidate and that they are to punch the hole next to the arrow next to the number next to the candidate they wish to vote for." "Hundreds of people spoke to me yesterda> before the polls closed about their extraordi nary confusion. I myself when I went to the polls was confused," Wexler said. "I saw the people who came out of the polling places. They were crying. They were in tears. In hys terics." Republican officials were skeptical. "In the end there will be 46,000 people claiming they voted for Pat Buchanan by mistake," said U.S. Rep. Mark Foley, a Palm Beach Republican He told the Los Angeles Times that the missed-punchhole argument was "a stretch of the imagination" and asserted that Buchanan easily could have polled 3,407 votes in a county that gave Foley's own ultraconserva tive, Reform Party congressional opponent 2,651 votes on Tuesday. "I saw them going to the polls with Confed erate flags flying on their trucks," said Foley, who said Democrats were grasping at straws. He and others said the ballot had been re viewed and approved by both major political parties and by state election regulators. LePore declined to comment. A staffer said her office would finish its recount before con sidering any other complaints from the pub lots military personnel receive from their unit's legal office. They fill in the name of their choice for president by hand. Okaloosa County has received six of them. Some large Florida counties report mail ing out hundreds of overseas ballots. Smaller counties sent out only handfuls. Dave Byron, a spokesman for Volusia County, said that 434 ballots were requested. On election night, 298 of those were counted with other ballots. "We'll have to see what happens to the rest," he said, saying he doesn't know how many of the rest will come back. David Leahy, Miami-Dade elections super visor, said he expects to get from 50 to 100