Rossi Wins Recount; Lead Drops To 42 Votes

Summary

Republican Dino Rossi held onto his lead in the governor's race Wednesday by a mere 42 votes out of more than 2.8 million cast after a statewide recount.

Story Published: Nov 23, 2004 at 2:51 PM PST

Story Updated: Aug 31, 2006 at 12:47 AM PST

Rossi Wins Recount; Lead Drops To 42 Votes
OLYMPIA - Republican Dino Rossi held onto his lead in the Washington governor's race Wednesday by a mere 42 votes out of more than 2.8 million cast after a statewide recount in an election that has become one of the most intriguing story lines of this political season.

Democrats are expected to demand yet another recount, meaning the outcome of the nation's last undecided race for governor may not be known until after Christmas. It is the closest gubernatorial election in Washington history.

Rossi's campaign declared victory and urged Democratic Attorney General Christine Gregoire to concede, saying there is no point in dragging the state through a third count.

"As far as we're concerned, Dino has won. Dino has won twice," said a jubilant Rossi spokeswoman Mary Lane. "It remains to be seen what Christine Gregoire will do after losing two counts."

Rossi, a self-made real estate millionaire and former state Senate budget chairman, was the underdog throughout the campaign, but he emerged with a 261-vote lead after the initial vote tally ended last week. The margin was so tiny that it triggered the automatic recount.

The vote-count drama has provided an endless source of fascination for political junkies, and it even attracted the attention of national parties and the White House, which dispatched its election experts to the state.

Gregoire told reporters and supporters in Seattle, "Every vote should be counted. The race continues. A 42-vote margin, my friends, that is a tied race."

Gregoire was not formally asking for a manual recount, but the Democrats had signaled earlier they would seek a hand recount in at least part of the state if Gregoire ended up on the short end.

Secretary of State Sam Reed, the state's chief elections officer, said he plans to certify the machine recount on Tuesday. The campaigns or their parties have three business days to request a full or partial manual recount at their own expense.

Reed said he would probably direct that such a recount begin Dec. 6, and that the job could take as long as two weeks. If a partial recount changes the outcome, state law requires a manual recount in the rest of the state. That would extend the uncertainty past Christmas. Inauguration day is Jan. 12.

Gregoire said the Democratic party has indicated that it is willing to pay for the recount. A statewide recount would cost the Democrats about $700,000.

Rossi, 45, was hoping to become the first Republican since 1980 to get elected governor. He ran on a platform of change and job-creation.

Gregoire, 57, was hoping to become the state's second woman governor. She carried eight of the 39 counties, most notably the largest, King, which includes heavily Democratic Seattle. Gregoire was strongly backed by the women's movement and was best known for battling America's tobacco industry.

King County gave Gregoire a last-minute lift, but not enough to put her over the top.

More than 700 previously uncounted ballots were added in King County after election workers, under the close watch of party observers, "enhanced" ballots to reflect voters' intentions. Those could include, for example, ballots on which a voter circled the candidate's name, rather than filling in the oval for an optical scanning machine to read.

The winner succeeds retiring two-term Gov. Gary Locke.