Untitled Document
Throughout 2004, the “swing state” of Ohio was in the media spotlight.
Prior to the election, it was a site of alleged voter fraud and suppression; as
Extra! reported (12/04), the news media tended to portray the charges as partisan
ploys rather than significant threats to the electoral process.
Then, on November 2, Ohio became this election’s Florida: Once again
a tight race hinged on the electoral votes of a state too close to call. At
the end of the night, with only about 130,000 votes separating Democrat John
Kerry and Republican George W. Bush, Kerry refused to concede. The reason: an
estimated 150,000–250,000 provisional ballots had yet to be examined.
Under state law, the process of reviewing these ballots, which are given to
people who believe they are registered but whose names are not found on the
rolls, could not occur for 11 days. Moreover, standards for validating these
ballots varied among Ohio’s 88 counties. The situation boded another long,
contentious wait to find out who had won the election.
But then, the day after Election Day, Kerry politely conceded, reportedly having
calculated that the number of possible votes in his favor would not be likely
to offset Bush’s lead (Washington Post, 11/4/04). Despite the uncertainties,
the election was, a report by the nonpartisan political website Election Online.org
put it (“Briefing: The 2004 Election,” 12/04), “beyond the
margin of litigation.”
The trouble with ballots
At the same time, however, a parallel story emerged: Ohio—and many other
states—had been dogged by a variety of voting difficulties, particularly
affecting minority communities who traditionally vote Democratic. Besides the
large numbers who found they could only vote provisionally, others found a shortage
of machines that meant waits of up to 10 hours—which, given the reality
of jobs and other responsibilities, meant that many people were simply unable
to vote. Still others had their votes improperly recorded—or not recorded
at all—by electronic terminals or punch-card machines, the “chad”-producing
technology still used in three-quarters of Ohio.
As later documented, the irregularities resulted in a significant number of
disenfranchised voters, and in something unseen since 1877: a debate in Congress,
on January 6, 2005, over whether to certify a state’s electoral votes.
With the Senate voting 74–1 and the House 267–31 to accept the
votes for Bush, the election was “settled,” but a question remained:
Could an electoral system so flawed produce legitimate results? Many thought
not: Through November and December, as “stolen election” charges
circulated, investigations of Ohio’s irregularities were mounted by the
Democratic National Committee and 10 Democratic members of the House Judiciary
Committee. (These resulted in a damning report, Preserving Democracy: What Went
Wrong in Ohio, available online at www.house.gov/conyers/). A recount of the
Ohio vote, initiated and paid for by third-party candidates Michael Badnarik
and David Cobb, was also performed after the state’s official count was
certified.
But according to news reports in the major mainstream press, this part of the
election ’04 saga was irrelevant, annoying or just so much Monday-morning
quarterbacking.
“Problems . . . that didn’t happen”
Extra! examined straight news coverage of voting irregularities and their effect
on the election in the two “papers of record,” the New York Times
and Washington Post; the evening news programs of the networks ABC, CBS and
NBC; and the newsmagazines Time, Newsweek and U.S. News & World Report,
from the day after the election to the end of the year (11/3/04–12/31/04),
four days after the independently sponsored recount ended.
In general, some of Ohio’s voting woes were duly noted while the election
process was still going on, particularly the extremely long waits—though
these were sometimes portrayed as positive. (ABC’s World News Tonight—11/3/04—called
Kenyon College students’ willingness to endure the queues “a genuine
inspiration.”) After the election, coverage of the still-raging controversies
declined precipitously.
Within days, voting problems fell off the evening news’ radar. NBC alone
offered a segment on the subject (11/3/04), reassuringly headlined “Voting
Problems Anticipated but Not Realized.” “Perhaps the biggest story
of Election Day problems were the ones that didn’t happen,” said
anchor Tom Brokaw, including “dire warnings from critics that [electronic
touch-screen voting machines] would cause Election Day chaos.” Contrasting
with its opening tone, the piece noted that long lines and provisional ballots
may have meant many lost votes, and that the NBC voter-alert line “received
more than 85,000 complaints. The two most common problems: callers who said
they registered to vote but never received confirmation, or applied for an absentee
ballot but never got one.”
NBC (incidentally, the first network to call Ohio for Bush) was also the only
network to cover the Ohio recount request (11/24/04), but portrayed it as dragging
things out: “More than three weeks after Election Day,” said Brokaw,
“votes, hard to believe, are still being counted in some parts of the
country. . . . But at least in one state, some are questioning whether the effort
is really worth the cost.”
The network news did offer additional segments examining voting difficulties
in Ohio and elsewhere—but these were relegated to the morning shows, such
as NBC’s Today (two stories on November 3, on provisional ballots and
long lines) and CBS’s Early Show (several segments on provisional ballots
on November 3, then a 52-word item November 18 on “balloting problems”).
Bush won—why worry?
During the period studied, the newsmagazines mainly confined their news reporting
to recapping Bush’s win and its implications (e.g., “In Victory’s
Glow,” Time, 11/15/04). Indeed, once Kerry had conceded, all the media
in Extra!’s sample moved on to post-mortems dissecting Bush’s victory,
particularly the role of “moral values” and Republican voter-mobilization
strategies. The New York Times Magazine even had a 6,000-plus-word piece on
the latter topic (“Who Lost Ohio?”, 11/21/04) that barely touched
on ballot irregularities.
The few magazine news stories discussing voting problems tended to downplay
them. Newsweek, in “Restoring Voter Trust” (11/3/04), mentioned
some election “glitches,” but quoted an election official who reassured
readers that “Bush’s lead in both the popular and electoral vote
count should alleviate some concerns about fairness.” Newsweek also covered
Ohio’s recount (12/30/04), but prefaced an interview on the topic with
Rev. Jesse Jackson, “Ohio officials concluded their recount of the presidential
vote last Tuesday—reaffirming President George W. Bush’s victory.
But the state’s election woes aren’t over yet.” (Jackson pointed
out that Ohio’s secretary of state, Kenneth Blackwell, “had to know”
that increased voter registration meant more voting machines than usual would
be needed.)
U.S. News did address the perils of provisional voting before the election
(“The Fix That Wasn’t,” 11/8/04—newsweeklies are postdated),
but didn’t return to the topic after the problems actually manifested.
The Washington Post and the New York Times were much more thorough, providing
some detailed articles on voting problems and post-election controversies, plus
several stories each on the recounts (Washington Post, 11/24/04, 12/1/04, 12/4/04,
12/7/04; New York Times, 11/25/04, 12/10/04, 12/29/04). The Post, for example,
provided this disturbing detail (12/15/04): “In voter-rich Franklin County,
which encompasses the state capital of Columbus, election officials decided
to make do with 2,866 machines, even though their analysis showed that the county
needed 5,000 machines.”
But articles like this also hastened to quote someone saying, or point out
themselves, that even in a flawless election, the results would have been the
same. The Times, for example, stated (11/12/04), “authorities acknowledge
that there were real problems on Election Day, including troubles with some
electronic machines and intolerably long lines in some places, [but] few have
suggested that any of these could have changed the outcome.” Said the
Post (12/15/04): “In Columbus, bipartisan estimates say that 5,000 to
15,000 frustrated voters turned away without casting ballots. [But] it is unlikely
that such ‘lost’ voters would have changed the election result.”
Do the math
This seeming failure to appreciate the bigger picture—that such hurdles
to voting are incompatible with democracy —was demonstrated in several
themes across print and broadcast media.
For example, prior to and after Kerry conceded Ohio and the presidential race,
provisional ballots and other uncounted votes were discussed as a math problem
rather than as a concern in and of themselves: “After vowing to fight
for every vote in Ohio, the Kerry campaign did the math and decided there was
no way the senator could win,” reported the CBS Evening News (11/3/04).
“In Making His Decision on Ohio, Kerry Did the Math” was a New York
Times headline (11/4/04). “By 9:30, the conclusion was clear: Kerry simply
did not have the numbers,” wrote Time (11/15/04).
Post-election public outcries about unanswered questions and irregularities,
as reported by weblogs and Internet sites, were portrayed as easily debunkable
“conspiracy theories.” Stories appeared with headlines like “Vote
Fraud Theories, Spread by Blogs, Are Quickly Buried” (New York Times,
11/12/04), “Latest Conspiracy Theory —Kerry Won—Hits the Ether”
(Washington Post, 11/11/04), “The Folklore of Election ’04”
(Time, 11/22/04), and “Election Day Conspiracy Theories” (NBC, 11/11/04).
Certainly some discrepancies were false alarms or overhyped, but the blogs so
disdained by mainstream journalists also highlighted genuine problems that were
underplayed or ignored by traditional outlets.
One discrepancy that did get across-the-board coverage in Extra!’s sample
was that of exit polls erroneously showing Kerry ahead of Bush—an oddity
cited by some Kerry supporters and bloggers as proof of foul play. ABC (11/5/04),
CBS (11/3/04) and Newsweek (11/4/04) even devoted individual stories to the
topic. Some of the conclusions: The data were skewed because Bush voters declined
to participate in the surveys, or pollsters stood too far away from exiting
voters. With an explanation agreed upon, there seemed to be no need to explore
the issue further.
As noted, the Washington Post and New York Times devoted space to voting problems
well into December. But their coverage was similar to their treatment of vote-fraud
charges earlier in the year (Extra!, 1–2/05): Credible complaints of disenfranchisement
were “balanced” with incommensurate countercharges or snide dismissals
from those accused.
For example, a report compiled by activists from the liberal People for the
American Way and others documenting “thousands of election volunteers
[who’d] witnessed voter suppression by a poll judge who peeked into voting
booths [and] electronic voting machines that assigned votes to Bush after voters
pressed Kerry’s name” was attacked by a spokesperson for the Republican
National Committee (Washington Post, 12/7/04), who “said Democrats should
investigate claims against themselves” such as “thousands of suspicious
registrations, including dead people [and] fictional characters like Dick Tracy
and Mary Poppins.”
The New York Times placed a candid voting irregularity story (“Voting
Problems in Ohio Set Off an Alarm,” 11/17/04) on page 37, whereas articles
a week or so earlier dismissing the “conspiracy theories” that challenged
Bush’s win were on the front or first few pages. “Voters in Ohio
delivered a second term to President Bush by a decisive margin,” the November
17 piece said. “But the way the vote was conducted there, election law
specialists say, exposed a number of weak spots in the nation’s election
system.” It then quoted a Harvard professor of election law: “We
dodged a bullet this time, but the problems remain . . . with the machines,
problems with the patchwork of regulations covering everything from recounts
to provisional ballots, and problems with self-interested party officials deciding
which votes count.”
Mixed messages
As the issue of irregularities persisted in the public arena, however, the
Times published a page-one, 2,000-plus-word story headlined “Voting Problems
in Ohio Spur Call for Overhaul” (12/24/04). Forthrightly stating, “Ohio
is providing a roadmap to a second generation of issues about the way the nation
votes,” this article by James Dao, Ford Fessenden and Tom Zeller Jr. was
virtually alone in mentioning “the large number of ballots—96,000
by recent counts—that registered no vote for president,” adding
that “experts say punch cards contributed to the problem.”
Still, the story’s overall message was mixed. Peppered with the-result-wouldn’t-have-changed
and anti-conspiracy quotes, it also closed with a quote from an Ohio Democratic
Party spokesperson who discounted the whole issue: “I think the majority
of Democrats feel that the election was more or less accurate. . . . Irregularities
that are normally overlooked have become the focal point of attention this year.
I just can’t see those people walking away satisfied.”
Perhaps you’d be unsatisfied too, if you’d read the Times’
editorials on voting problems. Its superb, occasional “Making Votes Count”
series stands in striking contrast to the paper’s zero-sum news stories,
as well as to the often dismissive (or absent) coverage of the other major media.
Based on investigative reporting by editorial writer (and lawyer) Adam Cohen,
the series has since January 2004 delved into serious “flaws in the mechanics
of our democracy,” according to the paper’s website.
During the period FAIR studied, six editorials in this series appeared, including
information and recommendations on “New Standards for Elections”
(11/7/04), “Improving Provisional Ballots” (11/21/04) and the need
for a verifiable paper trail for electronic voting machines (12/20/04, 12/27/04).
(The latter topic was mentioned only in passing in the rest of our sample, despite
the open invitation to vote fraud posed by such uncheckable technology—Extra!,
5–6/04.)
Unaddressed electoral system problems will continue to plague us, regardless
of who won the White House last year, and the press would do well not to wait
until 2008 to notice them again. Democrats and bloggers aren’t the only
ones paying attention: A November 4 report by international observers from the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe expressed concern about
“significant delays at the polling station” that were “likely
to deter some voters from voting and may restrict the right to vote,”
as well as “considerable confusion and varying approaches from one state
to another regarding the use of provisional ballots.”
Also, as BBC reporter Greg Palast argued in In These Times (12/13/04), the
more than 90,000 spoiled ballots in Ohio—mentioned nowhere in our sample
but in the New York Times (11/7/04, 12/24/04)—nearly make up the 118,000-vote
difference between Bush and Kerry. That fact alone suggests that, just as in
2000, the White House’s occupant may be there due to system failure rather
than any mandate. The leading media should not have dismissed this crucial issue
of democracy—regardless of how much they, like Senator Kerry, craved closure.