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View Full Version : Katherine Harris & Another Election Law F-Up



Butch
08-02-2002, 07:18 AM
She is one of the LAST people I want to see in Congress. Talk about someone who is completely incompetent and is just in the right place at the right time . . . :rolleyes:

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/08/02/national/02HARR.html

Again, Election Confusion for the Florida Secretary of State
By DANA CANEDY


IAMI, Aug. 1 — Here they go again. Florida elections officials and political candidates are confused about another election.

And once again, the controversy involves Katherine Harris, who is leaving her post as Florida secretary of state to run for Congress. She did not follow state elections procedures regarding her candidacy and, after realizing the oversight, was forced today to do a bit of damage control.

Florida's "resign to run" law requires that elected officials seeking another office submit a letter on the day of qualifying for the upcoming race stating when they intend to resign. If they do not, their resignation becomes effective immediately. Ms. Harris, whose office enforces state elections law, said she did not realize that the law applied to her because secretary of state becomes an appointed position next year.

So today, Ms. Harris, the official who made so much of "following the letter of the law" during Florida's botched 2000 presidential election, resigned as secretary of state in a letter to Gov. Jeb Bush dated Aug. 1, but she said her resignation was effective July 15, the day she qualified for the Congressional race.

The letter seemed to contradict that point, however, stating, "To this date, I have vigorously engaged in my duties as secretary of state, particularly with respect to our preparations for the upcoming elections, despite the increasing demands of my Congressional campaign."

The coincidence of Ms. Harris's campaign foul-up has not been lost on the Florida Democratic Party leaders who came to Al Gore's aid in the presidential race.

"She doesn't know election law," said Bob Poe, head of the Florida Democratic Party. "She couldn't even resign properly."

Now, the state Democratic Party wants to know exactly what Ms. Harris has been up to for the last two weeks to determine if she had in fact been working simultaneously on behalf of the state and herself. Late this afternoon, the Democrats filed a public information request seeking access to Ms. Harris's travel records, any documents she has signed since July 15 and records of all payments made to her by the state for travel and expense reimbursement during that time.

The party said it had not decided what actions to pursue if Ms. Harris is found to have been working for the state the last two weeks.

"We're going to take a look at what duties she performed between July 16 and Aug. 1," Mr. Poe said. "We're going to take a look at what she did when we thought she was secretary but wasn't."

At a hastily called news conference this afternoon in the Capitol cabinet room in Tallahassee — the same place where she certified the election results in favor of George W. Bush — Ms. Harris told reporters, "I made a mistake in not filing a letter of resignation at the time I qualified for my Congressional race."

Ms. Harris is running in the 13th District, a Republican stronghold around her hometown, Sarasota. The seat is held by Representative Dan Miller, a Republican who is not seeking another term.

Political experts say Ms. Harris is almost certain to win the race in a district where Mr. Miller ran unchallenged in his last two elections, but she nonetheless faces competition from a former local television newscaster and a lawyer who is a former law school classmate of Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton.

The Harris camp said Ms. Harris had complied with the requirements for qualifying for the race and was proceeding undeterred with her campaign.

"Katherine will win this race with her continuous strong grass-roots efforts, comprised of walking door-to-door and attending Coffees with Katherine," Rori Patrise Smith, her campaign spokeswoman, said in a statement.

Ms. Harris's resignation comes just a month before Florida will hold a statewide primary to determine whether Janet Reno, the former United States attorney general, or Bill McBride, a Tampa lawyer, will face Governor Bush in the November election for governor. It also puts Mr. Bush in the position of having to appoint a new secretary who will be responsible for overseeing the election.

"Once again, it looks like we'll be the object of many political cartoons across the country," said one Florida politics expert, Susan MacManus, a political science professor at the University of South Florida, in Tampa. "The Florida cartoons are just going to keep on rolling."

sbp
08-02-2002, 12:28 PM
Perhaps she can join DC Mayor Anthony Williams who has problems of his own. He is now suing to get back onto the Democratic primary ballot after being kicked off it due to lunkheads collecting forged signatures. Rather unfortunate since he's the only decent mayor DC has had in decades. And stupid as hell since DC is overwhelming Democrat.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A2906-2002Jul25.html
Williams originally submitted more than 10,000 signatures. When pages were found in seemingly identical handwriting, or listing obviously bogus voters like "Kofi Annan" and "Kelsey Grammer," the mayor decided to defend only about 5,800.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A33419-2002Aug1.html

jase71
08-02-2002, 12:59 PM
SBP ought to live this one, too... it's the same basic story.

One of the Democratic candidates for governor here in Wisconsin just got booted off the ballot because it turns out many of the signed petitions he submitted were falsified, including the names of dead people, first and last names mixed up, names and addresses that don't match up, and the signature of the lead counsel of the Republican candidate.

http://www.jsonline.com/news/metro/aug02/63305.asp

To be fair, it looks like his own campaign workers did him in. However, it doesn't matter. He's responsible for them, so the blame ultimately is his.

Butch
08-02-2002, 02:09 PM
The reason I find this far more interesting than the cases you bring up is that it is HER office that is supposed to be enforcing state election laws, and yet she was unable to follow them herself . . . and this coming from the person whose interpretations of Florida election laws shaped the outcome of the Presidential Election . . . ugly ugly ugly (And no, I'm not just referring to all that makeup she cakes on)

jase71
08-02-2002, 02:44 PM
Oh agreed. It's particularly ironic that she's having election related problems after her handling of the 2000 election. She was smug, condescending, and self-righteous. She's going to have a hard time generating any sympathy except from hardcore Republicans.

It couldn't have happened to a nicer person. ;)

sbp
10-01-2002, 09:08 PM
New Jersey Democrats trying to pull shenanigans to replace the slime Torricelli. Guess ballots need to be reprinted. :rolleyes:

http://www.msnbc.com/news/815055.asp

The battle for New Jersey’s Senate seat — and perhaps for control of the Senate — will be decided in court, as the state Supreme Court agreed Tuesday to hear arguments over whether Democrats can remove Sen. Robert Torricelli from the Nov. 5 ballot two weeks after the legal deadline and replace him with former Sen. Frank Lautenberg. Republican lawyers asked the court to rebuff the Democrats, saying some completed absentee ballots had already been received by county clerks.