Electoral fraud/US
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There have been repeated claims in the past two United States Presidential elections (2004 and 2000) of vote-rigging via defective voting machines, mass deletions of registered voters, and other means.
In the 2000 election, George W. Bush was officially elected by a narrow margin (271/538, 50.3%), and in the 2004 presidential election he was officially re-elected by somewhat less narrow margin (286/538, 53.2%). According to many claims, he would have been the clear loser in both cases had the votes been counted correctly.
Links
2008 Elections
see also: 2008 US elections, 2008 US presidential race
2006 Elections
see also: 2006 US elections
No reports of fraud so far.
2004 Elections
see also: 2004 US elections
- 2006-06-01 Was the 2004 Election Stolen? by Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
- 2006-06-07 RFK Jr: Taking the Stolen Election Seriously: further analysis by Thom Hartmann (AlterNet)
- 2006-02-23 votes were time-stamped 2 weeks before the election date (2006-02-24 slashdot)
- 2006-02-22 Man Pleads Not Guilty in Voting Device Case[(2006-02-26 slashdot)
2000 Election
- "Although it was reported – in The New York Times, no less – that Al Gore got more votes than George W. Bush in a statewide recount of Florida 'no matter what standard was chosen to judge voter intent,' most Americans don't know to this day that Gore actually won the 2000 election. The reason is a small percentage of Republican spin and a large percentage of journalistic cowardice in the mainstream media following 9/11. (This cowardice is limited to the USA, by the way – the story was extensively covered in most of the rest of the world.)" [1] Interestingly, the original article leaves the reader with the opposite impression; the AlterNet article points this out and concludes that the Times did not want to undermine Bush's authority in a time of crisis (the article having been published not long after 9/11).
- The Fall of the Athenian Republic at Snopes debunks some inaccurate Internet-rumors about the 2000 election