Story Published:
Nov 19, 2004 at 7:59 AM PDT
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 1:47 AM PDT
OLYMPIA - Election officials are preparing to
recount 2.8 million ballots by next Wednesday in the closest
governor's race in Washington state history.
But we still might not know who the next governor is for sure by
Thanksgiving. Try Christmas.
State Democratic Party Chairman Paul Berendt is already talking
about ordering a second, hand recount of the votes. "We see this
as a two-recount process," he said.
Buckle up - it's going to be a long, bumpy ride.
Republican Dino Rossi, a two-term state senator, finished 261
votes ahead of Democratic Attorney General Christine Gregoire when
all the counties reported all their votes on Wednesday night. If
Rossi wins he would be the state's first Republican governor in 20
years. State law requires a machine recount because the margin is
less than 2,000 votes.
Recounts in Washington state typically give more votes to the
original winner, and no statewide recount has reversed the results
of an election. But with just 261 votes separating the two
candidates, all bets are off.
"Historically, recounts have not changed the outcomes of major
elections," Secretary of State Sam Reed said Thursday. "If people
are pulling for the attorney general, I would say, don't get your
hopes up too high. But mathematically it certainly is possible (for
the results to change). So Senator Rossi's people shouldn't feel
like they've got it clinched."
Both campaigns and both parties plan to station observers in
every county and will have lawyers on-call, as they did on Election
Day.
"We will keep our eyes out for any irregularities and do our
best to make sure every vote gets counted," said Gregoire campaign
spokesman Morton Brilliant. "However long this process takes, it
will be worth it."
Gregoire declared the race a "virtual tie" on Wednesday and
spent Thursday working with her campaign staff and transition team.
Rossi flew to New Orleans early Thursday to spend a day meeting his
possible future colleagues at the Republican Governors Association
meeting.
Vote totals may change in the recount for several reasons.
Fourteen counties in Washington use punchcard ballots. A second
trip through vote-counting machines will likely break off some
hanging chads - those little bits of paper left dangling when
voters fail to punch their ballots forcefully enough, made infamous
by the 2000 presidential election in Florida.
Fill-in-the-bubble ballots, technically called optical scan
ballots, could register more or fewer votes the second time around
depending on how the machines interpret bubbles that are lightly
filled in.
"The machines are pretty touchy," Reed said.
The two counties that use electronic touch-screen voting will
take the disks or cartridges that capture vote results and run them
through a computer program again.
On Thursday and Friday, election officials were rounding up
workers for the recount, organizing ballots and resetting the
machines to count only the governor's race in statewide contests.
The actual recount begins Saturday.
"There is a certain amount of fatigue," said King County
Elections Director Dean Logan, noting that election staffers have
been scrambling since September, when the state instituted a new
primary. "The resolve of the staff is pretty good. They're up to
this."
Republicans are still suspicious of the votes in King County,
and rumors fueled by an anonymous e-mail have been swirling about
various electoral shenanigans there. But no one has stepped forward
with a shred of proof of any wrongdoing.
"That's sadly what you see when there's high emotions in a
close race," Logan said. "The election has been conducted in a
very transparent manner."
State GOP Chairman Chris Vance said angry Republicans called his
office screaming on Wednesday, convinced the election was about to
be "stolen."
"If we thought there was something to fight, we would fight,"
Vance said. But so far, nothing substantial has surfaced.
Vance warned of trouble if the recount puts Gregoire ahead of
Rossi: "If this election turns over, I'm going to have a hard time
keeping Republicans calm."
Ongoing suspense is perhaps the only sure thing in this
election. After the machine recount is done, the state will certify
the results of the election on Dec. 2. After that, the candidates
or the state parties can demand a hand recount or another machine
recount. They would have to pay $420,000 for a machine recount or
$700,000 for a hand recount, unless the recount changes the winner,
in which case taxpayers get the tab.