Story Published:
Dec 15, 2004 at 11:47 PM PDT
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 1:48 AM PDT
SEATTLE - Republicans announced plans Thursday morning to
sue King County over 573 newly discovered ballots that could change
the outcome of the closest governor's race in Washington state
history.
The county's Canvassing Board voted Wednesday to prepare the 573
absentee ballots for inclusion in the hand recount, over the
objections of Republicans who urged the county to investigate the
ballots first.
State GOP Chairman Chris Vance said Thursday the party would
seek a court order Thursday afternoon in Pierce County, aimed at
slowing down the processing of the previously rejected ballots to
allow them to be better tracked and verified.
Specifically, the party wants to stop the county from separating
the ballots from their outer envelopes, which Vance said would make
it far more difficult to determine where the ballots came from,
whether they were stored correctly, and why they were not counted
previously.
Democrats applauded and Republicans decried the board's decision
Wednesday to move forward with assessing the 573 previously
rejected ballots. King County is a Democratic stronghold and the
newly discovered ballots have the potential to change the outcome
of the election.
"I get to vote, I did it right, and it gets to count," said
King County Councilman Larry Phillips, whose ballot was among the
573 mistakenly rejected by election workers.
Election workers will verify signatures on the ballots, and the
canvassing board will meet again Monday to decide whether to count
the ballots that have been verified. The three-member board
postponed a decision on what to do with 22 other newly discovered
ballots but will consider that Monday as well, said Bobbie Egan,
county elections spokeswoman.
Republican Dino Rossi won the Nov. 2 election over Democrat
Christine Gregoire by 261 votes in the first count and by 42 after
a machine recount. As of Wednesday he had gained 79 votes in the
hand recount for a margin of 121.
The canvassing board voted 2-1 to move forward with recanvassing
the 573 ballots. King County Election Director Dean Logan and
Democratic King County Councilman Dwight Pelz voted for the
recanvassing; voting no was Dan Satterberg, chief of staff for
Republican King County Prosecutor Norm Maleng.
Satterberg complained that Logan was rushing, and said the board
should take more time to figure out the story behind the newly
discovered ballots.
"This is a matter of public integrity, public trust,"
Satterberg told Logan as they met before a row of TV cameras and
reporters. "The appearance to the world that's watching is that
you're rushing this through."
Logan said King County election workers made a mistake and he
wanted to correct it. The absentee ballots were not counted
originally because the voters' signatures had not been scanned into
the county's computer system. Election workers should have checked
the paper files, but instead the ballots were mistakenly rejected.
The error was discovered only after Phillips saw his name on a list
of rejected absentee ballots and notified Logan.
"The facts are pretty clear there was a discrepancy in the
canvassing of these ballots," Logan said. "There is a record that
shows these are validly registered voters who did nothing wrong."
State law allows counties to recanvass ballots and correct
errors during a recount if there is "an apparent discrepancy or an
inconsistency in the returns."
Election workers had found at least 245 of the 573 voters'
signatures on paper registration records by Wednesday afternoon.
They will continue checking the records and verify the ballots that
belong to registered voters. Workers will then take those ballots
out of their security envelopes and return them to the board for a
final decision on whether they should be counted.
Vance urged the canvassing board to reject the ballots.
"At some point it just lacks credibility that they keep finding
ballots," Vance said. "None of these ballots should be counted."
After the canvassing board vote, Phillips retorted, "I don't
care what the chairman of the state Republican party has to say. I
did my duty as a citizen and he's going to get out the way ... He
has a right to have his vote counted and so do I."
State GOP attorneys are considering their options now. If the
King County ballots are included in the recount, and they do end up
putting Gregoire on top, lawsuits may ensue.
"It doesn't look like I'm going to do any Christmas shopping
anytime soon," said Mark Braden, Rossi's chief lawyer, after
leaving the canvassing board meeting.
The board delayed a decision on 22 other ballots- 20 absentee
and two provisional - found in the side bins of plastic base units
in which polling machines sit. All ballots should have been logged
on Election Night and returned in a sealed bag to election
headquarters, but these 22 apparently weren't. They've been sitting
unsecured at various polling places since the election.
The hand recount is expected to finish by Dec. 22, though
there's no deadline set in state law. The governor's inauguration
is scheduled for Jan. 12.
Meanwhile, two members of the federal Election Assistance
Commission arrived in Washington on Wednesday to observe the
recount. Kay Stimson, spokeswoman for the commission, said the
members wanted to learn about the historically close recount for a
report on "best practices" by the states.