Re: Re: Re: Who wone Florida?
Grammatron said:
Ok...how about this November article from LA times entitled "Bush Still Had Votes to Win in a Recount, Study Finds."
http://www.latimes.com/la-111201recount.story
To repeat myself:
"It's a good reminder of the importance of reading the details, not just the headlines and summaries."
Yes, this headline spins the story to make it sound like Bush won. That happened repeatedly in coverage of this story, which is why many intelligent people (such as you and rikzilla) came away with the impression that Bush had won the recounts.
In listening to or reading the news, it's good to try to winnow out the editorializing, speculation, and spin, and see what relevant facts remain. I am often surprised that people I would expect to be most alert for media bias (conservatives who fear a liberal media bias) seem to be the ones most prone to fall for it. Case in point...
The LA Times
headline claims Bush had the votes. But if you read the story, you will see this is classic bait and switch. The recount Bush
might have won is
not the one the media consortium conducted.
There are 2 separate questions here. One question is:
what would the outcome have been, given real-world political maneuvering, if the recount had gone forward in November/December 2000? And
that is the recount that the LA Times headline is
speculating Bush
probably would have won -- based on the
assumptions that the recount would have been limited to the 4 counties Gore requested and that overvotes would not have been taken into consideration.
But the question which they
should have been addressing -- because it was the news they were ostensibly reporting in this story -- is:
what was the result of the media consortium recount of the vote?
In other words: if all the ballots had been recounted and if all ballots that were deemed valid tallied up, who would have won, Gore or Bush? That is the key question I thought the media recount was attempting to answer, but it is
not the question addressed by the headline (or by much of the news story).
The LA Times manages to give Bush a win by assuming (a) a recount limited to 4 counties, not statewide, and (b) overvotes not taken into account. But the media consortium did a statewide recount, and overvotes were one of the things they were able to tabulate.
That is what, on November 12, 2001, was
new (as in
news).
Why drag in all this other stuff? The apparent reason seems to be in order to provide "balance." Since the
actual news was that Gore would have won a statewide recount, various papers (including the
LA Times) chose to "balance" the story with ways that the votes could have been recounted under which Gore would not have won.
According to the
LA Times story:
"The significance of these ballots depends on what standards are used to weigh their validity. Under some recount rules, Bush wins. Under others, Gore wins."
No. That's yesterday's news. It relates to the counting of the undervotes, and the results for that part of the recount came out back in April. At that point, it was fair to say that Gore would have won by some standards and Bush by others (although the headlines back then also largely spun the story as
Bush won, with the actual news that Gore won by strict standards of counting and Bush by loose standards buried many paragraphs in).
With undervotes, it seemed impossible to agree on a single standard so the media consortium counted the votes by several standards. Therefore in April 2001 it was fair to report that there were different ways to recount and that under some Gore won and under others Bush won.
But the November story has to do with the now-completed recounting of the overvotes. With overvotes, it's much easier to agree on what's a valid vote and what isn't. There was no need to use a multitude of different criteria. If someone marked their ballot for both Bush and Nader or both Gore and Buchanan, for example, the ballot was void. But if someone checked off Bush on page 1 and also wrote in Bush's name on the write-in line (as many voters -- taking the ballot instructions literally -- did in fact do) then by Florida law the ballot was a valid vote for Bush. There was no need to argue about dimples and chads when it came to the overvote situation.
What was
news on November 12 was that the media consortium recount of valid overvotes added a net gain of close to 900 votes to Gore's total. That made Gore the winner of the recount, virtually regardless of how undervotes are counted.
That's the news story. The rest is obfuscation. (And note how neatly it's done: sandwiched in with 29 paragraphs above it and 26 below it. No wonder you and rikzilla missed it the first time around.)
Much of the time I feel charges of media bias are probably mistaken, and that what is seen as intentional spinning of the news is more likely carelessness and incompetence. But there have been cases where the media did deliberately suppress or distort the news -- coverage of FDR (to avoid showing the effects of his polio) and of JFK (to cover up his womanizing) come to mind. Several decades from now the media spin of the Florida recount will, I believe, be seen similarly as a textbook example of media suppressing a story in the name of what they believed to be the public good.