You'll Never Guess! He Wants ANOTHER RECOUNT! ROTFLMAO!

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Gore Calls Anew for Recount in Fla.

By Sandra Sobieraj Associated Press Writer Tuesday, Nov. 28, 2000; 2:21 p.m. EST

WASHINGTON –– Al Gore called Tuesday for a recount of thousands of questionable ballots in Florida's contested election, and urged Texas Gov. George Bush to drop his objections. "This is not a time for delay, obstruction and procedural roadblocks," the vice president said.

Gore, who has challenged Bush's victory certification in Florida, told reporters his proposal was necessary because the nation needs "to be able to say there is no legitimate question of who won this election."

Speaking outside the vice president's residence in Washington, Gore said he believed the recount he seeks could be completed in seven days "starting tomorrow morning," and all court proceedings could be finished "one or two days after that."

Gore's comments served to re-enforce a filing in the state courts in which his lawyers asked for a court-appointed master to oversee the recounting of thousands of votes cast in Miami-Dade and Palm Beach counties.

Gore said those ballots have not yet been counted, a claim at odds with Republican assertions. The Republicans say the votes were run through vote-counting machines twice and contain no valid votes for president.

Gore discussed his unprecedented election contest after a private lunch with Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, rumored to be a leading contender for a Democratic Cabinet should the vice president win the office. Gore said most of their discussion centered on economic policy, and he added, "I don't think that is it right for me to be offering people jobs."

Gore's remarks marked the second time in less than 24 hours he had gone before the public to appeal for patience while he challenges the vote certification in Florida, the state that stands to pick the next president.

"The American people," he said, "understand the importance of getting this election right."

Florida's top elections official, a partisan Bush supporter, certified Bush as the winner – by a mere 537 votes out of 6 million cast – but Gore is contesting the count in court.

Outreach to hold Democrats solidly behind him continued Tuesday as campaign chairman Bill Daley, campaign manager Donna Brazile and political adviser Monica Dixon walked Democratic governors through Gore's legal strategy in a 30-minute conference call.

On Monday night, Gore made a brief, nationally televised plea for fairness, accuracy and patience.

"That is all we have asked since Election Day: a complete count of all the votes cast in Florida," Gore said. "Not recount after recount as some have charged, but a single, full and accurate count."

Gore has repeated those themes in the weeks since the election, and time is running out for him to sell his message. A new poll by CNN/USA Today/Gallup found that a growing number of Americans think the vice president should concede the election to George W. Bush – 56 percent, compared with 46 percent last week. The poll was taken after Florida officials declared Bush the winner there Sunday night, but before Gore's televised address. An ABC-Washington Post poll, taken in the same time-frame, found six in 10 saying Gore should concede.

"Every four years there is one day when the people have their say," Gore said as he stood before a dozen U.S. flags in the living room of the vice presidential residence. On the street outside, passing motorists honked at screaming supporters and protesters.

"In many ways the act of voting and having that vote counted is more important than who wins the majority of the votes that are cast," Gore said.

Gore and running mate Joseph Lieberman are challenging Florida's official results, which, if they hold, would give Bush the presidency.

"Our country will be stronger, not weaker, if our next president assumes office following a process that most Americans believe is fair," Gore said.

The court papers filed Monday in Tallahassee seek an order to hand count some 10,000 ballots in Miami-Dade County that did not register a vote for president when counted by machine. Gore alleged a hand recount was aborted there last week because of "organized intimidation." He asked the court to declare him the victor. Gore also contested results in Palm Beach and Nassau counties in hopes of overtaking Bush's 537-vote lead out of 6 million Florida votes cast.

Recount Of The Recount Of The Recount

-- Anonymous, November 28, 2000

Answers

I'm beginning to feel totally embarrassed by his behavior. He needs to appear before the press once again to reiterate his point of view, one which we all know all too well. So sad.

-- Anonymous, November 28, 2000

An American Tragedy Gore is.

He'll keep this thing in the courts until he achieves his desired result.

I almost did not cast a vote for the presidency. I stood in the booth, chad-puncher in hand, applying pressure to the Bush chad (impregnating it), stood back for a moment (had second thoughts) and then finally voted for Bush. Had I not cast that vote for Bush, my chad would have still been pregnant and they would have (probably) counted it. To me, this would not have been the 'intent' of my (almost)non-vote. I know that several colleagues of mine did not cast a vote for president but voted for all the other local races.

I don't see how ANYONE can determine the 'intent' of a voter when the vote was not 'completed'.

You're right Maria, he's embarrassing the entire country and now I'm beginning to feel embarrassed (or is it sorry) for him.

Deano

-- Anonymous, November 28, 2000


Excuse me,

I believe Al Gore became an embarrassment on Impeachment Day when he said in front of God, the worldwide media, and everybody else that Bill Clinton would go down as "one of the greatest Presidents in history."

This is the man we want leading us into the 21st century? NOT.

-- Anonymous, November 29, 2000


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