Kerry Supports Ohio Vote Investigation, Jackson Says
November 28, 2004
John Kerry supports a “full investigation” into voting irregularities in Ohio, Rev. Jesse Jackson said Saturday, during
a teleconference with media regarding a recount and legal challenge of the Nov. 2 vote.
“John Kerry supports a full investigation,” Jackson said. He recently spoke with the Democratic presidential nominee and
reported that Kerry said he conceded the race on the morning after Election Day because “originally, he was inclined to
believe what he was told” about the results. On Wednesday, Nov. 3, Kerry said there was little chance he could close
George W. Bush’s 130,000-vote lead with the uncounted provisional and absentee ballots.
Jackson’s brief remarks may be the first that shed some light on Kerry’s fast concession – a decision many supporters
felt was too hasty. Jackson will be in Ohio today, Sunday, Nov. 28, to declare his support for a recount of the Ohio
vote and for a broader investigation into voting patterns that he said were “suspicious” and could have given votes to
Bush that he did not earn.
“We want to look at the exit polls,” Jackson said, referring to at least two non-partisan Election Day polls, by Zogby
and CNN, which gave Kerry 53 percent and 51 percent of the vote, respectively. “We don’t want to be presumptuous, but
these numbers in the Butler, Clarmont, Warren and Hamilton counties are suspicious.”
By suspicious, Jackson is referring to the latest analysis of the Nov. 2 vote by a coalition of Ohio voting rights
activists. In analyzing the still-unofficial results, the totals reveal that C. Ellen Connally, an African-American
Democratic candidate from Cleveland for Ohio Chief Justice, received more than 257,000 votes than Kerry.
In Butler County, for example, Connally had 45,457 more votes than Kerry. The reason these vote counts are suspect is
because Connelly, a retired African-American judge, was vastly outspent in her race, and did not have the visibility of
the presidential race. Thus for a more obscure Democratic candidate, farther down on the ticket, to get a quarter of a
million more votes statewide than Kerry, suggests something happened to suggest there may have been a transfer of Kerry
votes to Bush.
“This looks like a computer glitch or a computer fix,” said Bob Fitrakis, a lawyer, political scientist and Editor of
the Columbus Free Press (http://freepres.org) who has written about election irregularities since Bush was declared the
winner. Fitrakis is among the team of lawyers who announced they would soon file an election challenge in the state’s
Supreme Court.
“Statistically, Kerry, as the Democratic presidential candidate, should have more votes than Connally. In a presidential
election, most voters have the priority of casting a vote for president and the votes for president are almost always
much higher than those of candidates farther down the ticket. When voters vote for Democratic candidates farther down
the ticket, it is usually being driven by a sample ballot from the Party, starting at the top with president. Many
voters simply don’t vote for Supreme Court justices. It is highly improbable that Connally’s vote totals would be so
much higher than Kerry’s,” Fitrakis said.
The fact that Warren County has such odd vote counts is no surprise to Fitrakis. “The Republican-dominated county threw
out all the media and independent vote watchers when votes were being counted at the end of Election Day, claiming
‘homeland security’ issues. This would have easily allowed for the wholesale shifting of a large amount of votes from
Kerry to Bush. If you’re behind closed doors, it is easy enough to do. The November issues of Popular Science and
Popular Mechanics magazines show how easy it is to hack the vote and steal an election. The articles are called ‘E-vote
emergency: And you thought dimpled chads were bad’ and ‘Could hackers tilt the election?’ I think they did,” explained
Fitrakis.
Fitrakis said that when one looks at the Connally-Kerry results across the state, it becomes clear that Connally – who
was on the Ohio Democratic Party sample ballots – was getting tens of thousands of votes in counties that were known to
be Republican strongholds, until this year’s unprecedented voter registration and mobilization efforts.
There were 15 Ohio counties where Connally’s margin was 5,000 votes or more better than Kerry’s unofficial results. In
five counties, Connally had a 10,000-vote margin or better. These counties used punch card, optical scan, and touch
screen voting machines – with most using punch card systems.
This analysis is merely the latest that has been uncovered about how Ohio’s Nov. 2 vote was tilted toward Bush.
Immediately after the election, there were reports that the number of voting machines brought to the state’s urban,
Democratic-leaning precincts was deliberately shorted. There were numerous sworn statements from voters in urban areas
that the voter rolls were old and out-of-date, forcing voters, many registered for years, to use provisional ballots –
which get counted last or do not get counted at all unless the voter was in the right precinct. Voters also testified
under oath about machines malfunctioning and recording votes for Bush when people believed they had selected Kerry.
All of these trends – plus the fact that the Bush victory did not jibe with at least two non-partisan exit polls taken
on Election Day in Ohio – are behind Jesse Jackson’s trip to the state today, Sunday, Nov. 28.
Jackson will visit Columbus and Cincinnati to meet with voters, civil rights activists, ministers and others who are
working for a full accounting of the Ohio presidential vote. Jackson said he hoped to coordinate these activities and
his organization, Rainbow- PUSH, would join litigation seeking to challenge Bush’s alleged victory at the state Supreme
Court.
Jackson also joined the call by many, from Common Cause to the Green and Libertarian Parties, for Ohio Secretary of
State Kenneth Blackwell to recuse himself from tallying the state’s presidential election result, because he was
co-chair of the Bush- Cheney re-election team in Ohio.
“We need to investigate, coordinate, litigate, recount and recuse," he said, referring to the legitimacy of the Ohio
vote. “Mr. Blackwell cannot be both the owner of the team and the umpire.”
*************
Steven Rosenfeld is senior producer of The Laura Flanders Show on Air America Radio.