With protesters on both sides, Democrat Gregoire was certified as the winner in the Washington State Gubenatorial race. Republican sore losers protested, demanding a revote, citing “irregularities”.
Hmmmm…. Aren’t Republicans trying to say, “Get over it” to Ohio protesters? Stupendous hypocrits, the lot of them.
Article archived here.
Tuesday, January 11, 2005 · Last updated 12:15 p.m. PT
Protesters turn out for, against Gregoire’s certification
By DAVID AMMONS
AP POLITICAL WRITER
OLYMPIA, Wash. — Hundreds of chanting partisans staged dueling protest rallies at the Capitol on Tuesday, many demanding a revote in the state’s closest governor’s race in history.
Police estimated more than 1,000 protesters massed on the Capitol lawn. A no-man’s zone staffed by at least a dozen state troopers kept a larger pro-revote crowd separate from a pack of Democrat Christine Gregoire’s backers.
Cries of “revote” and “revote or revolt” rang out as lawmakers inside the Capitol prepared to debate a GOP motion to delay certification of the governor’s election for two weeks while the courts and lawmakers deal with reports of voting irregularities.
A similar move by Senate Republicans failed by a single vote on Monday, the opening day of the new 15-week legislative session.
The pro-revote crowd was decked out in orange attire popularized by protesters in Ukraine. One speaker after another demanded a revote of Gregoire’s ultra-close contest with Republican Dino Rossi.
“If it’s good enough for Ukraine, it’s good enough for us,” one speaker yelled.
“The crowd took up the chant, “The whole world is watching!”
The pro-Gregoire contingent didn’t have microphones or a list of speakers, but hoisted signs and yelled their replies to nearly every Rossi rally speech or taunt.
When the Rossi crowd yelled “Revote!” the Gregoire people retorted “We won!”
A Rossi sign read, “Gregoire: You’re fired,” a la “The Apprentice” TV show. A pro-Gregoire sign said “Sore loser.”
The 1996 GOP candidate for governor, radio talk show host John Carlson, said the noisy opening week rallies reflected the public’s desire to be heard on this unprecedented election and aftermath.
The session opened Monday on a sharply partisan note as the still-unsettled governor’s race spilled over into the Legislature in a prelude to an all-out court battle.
Majority Senate Democrats rallied around their embattled governor-elect, Christine Gregoire, refusing to let Republicans delay certification of her election. Gregoire won the third vote count – a hand recount – by just 129 votes out of 2.9 million ballots cast. It was the narrowest margin in state history.
Minority House Republicans planned the same gambit Tuesday – with the same outcome expected – during a joint House-Senate session just before lame-duck Gov. Gary Locke was set to give his final State of the State Address.
Gregoire will be inaugurated on Wednesday, even though Republican rival Dino Rossi and the state Republican Party are challenging the election in court, seeking a statewide revote.
Republicans said the gubernatorial election was riddled with errors serious enough to undermine voter confidence and to throw the outcome in doubt.
Monday’s flare-up provided an unusual start for the 15-week session. The day typically is devoted to bland speeches, swearing in members and electing the majority’s pick for officers.
In the Senate, maverick conservative Tim Sheldon was the only Democrat to vote with the solid bloc of Republicans on the two-week delay motion. Sheldon supported both Rossi and President Bush in the fall election.
Minority Leader Sen. Bill Finkbeiner, R-Kirkland, led the charge.
“Every day more issues come to light and more rumors abound,” with reports of dead people and felons voting, lists of votes not matching voter lists, and hundreds of provisional ballots illegally run through voting machines, he said.
He conceded that suspending the election certification for even a few weeks would be “a monumental step that has never taken place in our state’s history.” But he said it’s warranted.
Democrats urged the Legislature to butt out and let the court challenge proceed. Senate Judiciary Chairman Adam Kline, D-Seattle, said it would “stop the cogs of government” and greatly hurt Gregoire if she has to delay taking office.
“There is a time for partisanship and politics and there is a time for governing,” said Senate Majority Leader Lisa Brown, D-Spokane. “We are a state that is governed by constitution and laws, not by chanting crowds, rumor of the day or, frankly, making it up as we go along.”
The Legislature’s best route would be to pass a strong election reform package, said Sen. Jim Kastama, D-Puyallup, chairman of the panel that will consider such legislation.
Felons voted; dead people voted; 358 “provisional” votes ran through machines and sent into anonymity before signatures (or voter registration) could be verified; hundreds of ballots “found” under voting machines between recounts; hundreds of people registered to vote from ONE address; hundreds registered to vote from Mailboxes Etc.; military ballots were the LAST in the nation to be sent out not arriving overseas until after Nov. 2 (and the record of that was altered); contrary to county statute, the names and addresses of hundreds of rejected provisional voters were handed over to Democrat state chairman Paul Berendt who then returned after the weekend with 400 afidavits therefor validating those ballots. The states top two certified handwriting analysts analyzed those 400 afidavits and determined that many of them were signed by that SAME PERSON!; THIS ALL HAPPENED IN HEAVILY DEMOCRAT KING COUNTY!!!
These are just the things I remember sitting here without notes. There is more than that.
How can you people even say with a straight face that Christine Gregoire is legitimate?