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Wednesday, Dec. 11
The Indiana Daily Student

History in the making

Transcription:

History in the making

By Duncan Teater

Who knew Florida would become the epicenter of this country's biggest election nightmare? Things like this are only supposed to happen in corruption-filled dens of iniquity such as Chicago, where dead people have been known to vote. 

But instead, it's the sandy shores of the Sunshine State that are in the throes of electoral uncertainty, the likes of which haven't been seen in this country for more than 100 years. In fact, 124 years ago, Rutherford B. Hayes and Samuel Tilden were locked in a similar struggle for presidential power. The fact that most Americans probably can't remember who won gives us an idea of how far we've come since the two centrist candidates were locked in a post-election battle that lasted four months. 

Four months! 

One would think the advent of computers, telephones, the automobile and, for heaven's sake, even the light bulb would have eliminated such problems from the electoral landscape. But no. 

Quick elections are a mirage produced by well-groomed television anchors and their puppeteers. Even though they tell us one candidate or another is the projected winner, that usually has nothing to do with real vote counts. Instead, they rely on surveys conducted as voters leave the polls. 

Most real vote counting doesn't happen until the days after the election, and can extend into the weeks after when absentee ballots are taken into account. Most of the time, this doesn't make much difference to the television announcers, because one candidate wins overwhelmingly enough that exit poles can accurately predict the result of the election -such as when Ronald Reagan creamed Jimmy Carter and Walter Mondale. And when President Bill Clinton obliterated Bob Dole. 

Ha ha! Not this time. 

As I said last week, America hates its choices. That's why there's a razor-thin margin of victory, causing confusion that could linger for months. Consider this possibility: What if legal battles play out during the next four months, just as in 1876? We could inaugurate one candidate and then replace him with another. 

This, my friends, is history in the making. When our grandchildren study Election 2000 in school, they will ask us what it was like. 

So you can keep up with things, and know what to tell your grandchildren, here's a brief chronology of what's happened since last Tuesday:

TUESDAY, NOV. 7: A weary America trudges to the polls, evenly divided between Texas Gov. George W. Bush and Vice President Al Gore.

TUESDAY, NOV. 7, LATE NIGHT: CNN gives Florida to Gore. Then it takes it away. Then it gives it to Bush. Then, early Wednesday morning, it takes it away. It's kind of like if I tried to give my mom South Carolina for her birthday. Not really mine to give away, is it, CNN?

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 8: Hundreds of elderly Jewish women crawl out of the woodwork as they claim a faulty ballot duped them into voting for Reform party candidate Pat Buchanan instead of Gore. Imagine their emotional state: After living through global persecution, they had the chance to vote for Joey Lieberman. Now they think they've voted for a man who, in a New York Post column in 1990, said the reality of the Holocaust is at best debatable. These women, more than any cadre of campaign consultants, are Gore's greatest assets.

THURSDAY, NOV. 9: After months of watching & the nation's most polished political figures smooth-talk their way through the campaign, we are treated to something else. With fear gripping my heart, I realize Bob Crawford, Florida commissioner of agriculture, has been appointed to the committee overseeing the election. The commissioner of agriculture?

FRIDAY, NOV. 10: America wakes up to the face the election hinges on a mere 327 ... no, 288 ... no, 368 votes. Well, it's some disgraceful number. Less than the cast and crew of "Happy Days."

SATURDAY, NOV. 11: The Bush campaign, which has been denouncing Gore's team for even thinking of taking the Palm Beach ballot to court, becomes the first campaign to file suit in federal court. It wants a judge to stop the hand counts Gore requested in four Florida counties. This move comes just in time for the Bush team, because the hand counting gives Gore a few dozen extra votes. Clinton. and Reagan would have laughed at a few dozen votes. Bush is going to court.

SUNDAY, NOY. 12: Political columnists everywhere begin to weep, slowly realizing they will be writing about this race for the rest of their lives.

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