Stuff You Should Know - The 2000 Presidential Election: A Real Cluster
Episode Date: January 4, 2024When George W Bush and Al Gore ran against one another, most pundits predicted a tight race. Absolutely zero of them predicted the election would come down to a few hundred votes. Today, we still don�...��t know who won.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeartRadio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh and there's Chuck.
And it's just us again, which is fine because we're here to talk about the 2000 election
Jerry probably wouldn't want to hear about it
Can I tell the quickest story of my how this went down for me sure I
Was moving to Los Angeles in November 2020 and
2000 what I say 2020 yeah. Weird that you had mentioned 2020
when you were talking about 2000.
I know.
So I was in a big U-Haul.
I was towing my car, my 75 Plymouth Valiant,
a name T behind me.
And I was somewhere in Texas, West Texas,
when I spent the night and then woke up the next morning,
it was kind of freezing cold in West Texas.
And I was documenting this whole trip via my high eight video camera, singing songs into
it and kind of documenting the journey. I'm going to get all these tapes digitized soon.
That's one of my Christmas break projects this year. But I very distinctly remember when
I turned on the camera and got in that truck the next morning, I said, hey, everyone, so, or,
I don't know if I can say, hey, everyone,
because I had no audience back then.
Sure.
So I think I said, hey, me.
It's weird.
I went to bed last night and the election had happened
and I woke up today and no one knows who won still.
And this is weird because we always know who won. I guess I'll see what happens.
And then I hit the road. Yeah. And what, 30 something days later, it was finally decided by the
Supreme Court of the United States. Yeah. That was an interesting thing too that today you're like,
yeah, I could see not knowing that that day. That seems a little, a little quick, almost suspiciously quick.
Now, at the time it was like, what do you mean it's past midnight and we don't know who
won?
That's crazy.
The 2000 election definitely started that whole thing.
And the election for those of you who don't know was between Vice President Al Gore,
who was Vice President to Bill Clinton
for both terms. He was looking to continue the Clinton legacy, I guess, as President himself.
And he was running against George W. Bush, son of George Bush, George H. W. Bush,
and the brother of Jeb Bush. I think it's his older brother. And at the time,
Al Gore was viewed as this very wooden, I think Jeb's younger.
Okay. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Sorry. Jeb's the younger brother. And at the time, Al Gore was viewed as
wooden, unapproachable, very smart, policy-wank, who could not relate to the average person to save his life.
And George Bush was viewed as just this complete dingus who was a part of a political legacy
whose family clearly viewed him having the presidency as his birthright.
That was the selection that America had at the time.
But this is all against the backdrop of the economy really doing nicely and there hadn't been any really
big problems or wars for a while. I can't I can't really think of any
direct war that the United States would have been involved in since Vietnam.
Oh, like, you know, big time war. Yeah. Yeah. I don't think that, I think Vietnam was the last war we were in during this election.
Yeah.
So, you know, if you were watching comedy shows, especially Saturday night live at the time,
you would get two things.
You would, on one side, you would get, I can't even remember who played them, but this
was how I'll go or was basically portrayed.
Darryl Hammond.
Well, oh, that's right.
He did.
I don't know.
I'm like Bill Clinton without a scandal.
That was Al Gore, and then of course, I guess, was Will Ferrell the first, and Bush, you
know, through comedy, and the media was, you know, that guy, I don't even care about
being president.
Yeah. I just want to make daddy happy.
That was sort of the lay of the land pre 9 11 before, you know, a lot of the
country rallied around Bush.
And, you know, like we said, Gora was trying to get away from that Clinton
stink. Yeah, such that he didn't even get bill on the can,
pain trail within that much.
And it was also, I mean, this is a landmark election
in a lot of ways, but it was also sort of the first,
the first big election where you had someone say,
and hey, Gore is the big Washington insider,
and I'm just this guy from Texas,
like sort of rural versus urban power struggle.
Yeah, that's where it generally began.
The Bush campaign really was doing what they could
to kind of highlight that dividing line.
Yeah, so at the time,
Bush had been pretty far ahead in the polls in the summer.
After the Democratic National Convention, Gore mounted a big comeback and by fall, by September,
a couple of months before the election, these guys were basically deadlocked and everybody
was saying this is going to be a really, really, really close election.
Yeah. Hold on to your hands.
Everybody knew that it would be close, but no one had any guess that it would turn out
as close as it actually did.
But just the polling, poll after poll after poll showed like, uh, uh, goers in the lead,
nope, bushes in the lead, goers in the lead, gallop found that the lead changed nine times
just in the fall, the fall.
Nine times.
Exactly.
And so by election day, Tuesday, November 7th,
a lot of people, including Tim Russell, Reston Peace,
had said, I think Florida is going to be the,
going to decide the outcome of this.
Yeah.
I didn't see exactly why I don't know if it was a gut feeling
or what the deal was, but there were,
there were a few people who were already pointing to Florida.
And at the time, the news organizations, NBC, ABC, CBS, Fox, CNN, and the AP, all subscribed
to a company called the Voter News Service, which had been set up in 1990, I think, by the big networks to basically pool their resources
to pay for people who did exit polling. And they would give that data directly to the networks
who would then use it to kind of like, you know, read the tea leaves as best they could
to forecast who won. Because in 1980, NBC called Reagan at 815 p.m. and set up this huge competition among the networks.
Oh yeah, like calling for calling the election was a big big deal for a network.
Yeah.
And so you found that great article where they were like, you know, after that Reagan thing,
all the network started spending a lot of money in the next cycle,
you know, on their own exit polling data.
And it was like millions and millions of dollars. spending a lot of money in the next cycle, on their own exit polling data.
And it was like millions and millions of dollars.
So when they got together basically and said,
hey, why don't we all just hire this one service
so we can all save a lot of money.
The downside of that was they were all getting
the same information whether it was good or bad.
And in this case, it turned out the information was not great.
So Gore was doing pretty good, not just in the National Vote, but
Electorally too.
He got Pennsylvania, got Michigan, and Florida was starting to come in.
And apparently the numbers were up.
The exit polling data for Gore was showing that he probably won Florida.
Enough that NBC said, oh, we're doing it again.
And at 7.49 pm on election day, NBC called Florida for Gore.
They didn't go so far as to call the presidency for Gore, but the writing was on the wall.
If Gore won Florida, that was that.
And I guess about 15 minutes later,
the rest of the news organizations had joined
and said the same thing.
Right, so everyone's calling Florida
for Gore publicly at this point that night.
The VNS, that voter news service
that was doing the exit polling for everybody,
said, hey, news organizations, we've got some issues here with our data. Like, for example,
in this one county in Florida, it was supposed to be 4,302 votes that we saw. Someone
added a zero to that, and it was 43,020 votes. So maybe you should sort of hold off on calling
this thing. And all the news organization said,
well, that's too late.
We've already done that.
And at just before 10 p.m. at 9.55, CNN was the first to come on and say, hey, wait a minute,
we jumped the gun here.
Everyone else, of course, followed suit.
And then at 2.15 in the morning, Fox News comes on and says,
Bush is gonna be the winner, not just of Florida,
but the whole thing.
And then everyone else followed suit and said,
and of course this is overnight.
So you wake up in the morning thinking that George Bush had one.
Right.
So, well, not quite actually.
Well, if you were staying up, we'll see what happened between then and sunrise.
Yeah, and I think a lot of people were staying up glued to the TV still at this point by the time Fox said that Bush was the winner.
Yeah.
And the rest of the networks joined in with that. So,
that's three, three times now that they have made the projection.
Because retracting a projection is a projection
in and of itself.
It's like Rush said, even if you choose not to decide,
you still have made a choice.
It's essentially the same thing.
And there's a quote from Donna Brazil,
the disgraced democratic operative who was running
Gore's campaign at the time.
She texted Gore on his blackberryberry and I read the New York
Times article about this, they felt compelled to explain that a blackberry was an instant messaging
pager. That's how 2000 this thing was.
By the way, really quick, I saw that movie, the blackberry movie on a plane flight recently
and it's actually very good.
Oh, I'm sure.
Most likely, you start pretty good.
No, it's a movie movie. Most movies are pretty good.
Anyway, recommended. So she told she's running the campaign and told gore like don't give up
yet. This is every it's too too weird. Essentially I'm paraphrasing here. Yeah, which is true.
But despite that gore was like I don't I think we lost. And so we even went to the extent of waking his wife,
Tipper, who was not actually sleeping.
She was under the blanket with a flashlight,
making a list of bands that she didn't like.
And their kids and said, hey, I lost essentially.
And they kids started crying.
So he started to get ready to do his concession speech.
That's how close this
came. He called, he also called Bush, called George Bush, and said, Hey, congratulations,
you know, you're the winner, obviously. And he got into a limo to go give the concession
speech and Nashville to his supporters. And on the way, the one of his operatives said,
Hey, I've been watching the watching the Secretary of State, site in
Florida, and Bush's lead went from 50,000 to 6,000.
I don't think we should concede yet.
And literally this happened in the caravan on the way for him to give his concession speech
at like 3.30 in the morning.
Yeah.
And so because there were still some precincts that had been unreported.
So they were like, slow your role, Gore.
So Gore called up Bush.
Again, could not have been a fun phone call.
Told them what was going on.
Apparently there are people that heard these calls and said, Bush said,
you know, are you really going to withdraw your concession?
And Gore responded, quote, well, you don't have to be snippy about it. So Bush said,
well, my brother is a governor for to, and he said that he said, I won. And Gore said, well,
let me explain something. You're younger brothers, not the ultimate authority on this.
That, that, I think the Al Gore finally came around at the end, but George Bush, he sounded
like a cross between you're Simidie Sam and a member of Leonard Skinnerd.
Yeah, that's about right. Actually, now that you've mentioned it, it's like dead on.
Yeah, so it was, I mean, between them,
interpersonally, it got a little sticky right at the beginning.
Yeah, I think George Bush even said, you can't retract. You're not allowed to do that essentially.
Daddy, can he do that?
So, yeah, it was a really big deal.
I don't think that it had actually happened before.
Not as far as I know.
I think this was sort of the first thing.
Yeah, there were a lot of first things in this election.
Yeah, so by four o'clock, the networks all retract their calls.
And basically, this is what younger Chuck wakes up to in West Texas
Which is we don't know who won
Tom Brokall gets on NBC and says quote
We don't just have a gunner face. Oh wait, that was
Al Gore light
I'm getting all confused now. I heard a little brok on there. I used to do brokall
We don't just have the egg on our face.
We've got a homelid all over our suits at this point.
Mm-hmm.
And our face isn't everywhere else.
That was great.
That was a great broke all.
And he always sounded like he was out of breath.
It wasn't that he got on, Chuck.
This was 4 a.m.
He was still on from when he got on at 7 p.m.
Oh, yeah.
This poor guy and Tim Russell, at least just on NBC alone,
are like just dying here,
but they've never seen anything like it.
And again, like as you said,
this was a big deal in that it was really embarrassing.
It was a really big thing to call,
to be the network that called the presidency.
So it was equally humiliating,
to be the network that had to retract it and
that happened to all the networks. But that also had a really big impact on public opinion.
At first they were like, well, gore one. So that means that if you guys called this
it before 8 p.m. Eastern, there were still polls open in the West Coast and how many bush
voters did you discourage
from turning out because you'd said Gore already won. And then the opposite of it was that when they
said Bush won, but then retracted it, people were like, no, Bush is the winner, which made it
harder for Gore to get the public behind the recount that he was going. There was a lot of
public opinion about this, a lot of opposition, some manufactured,
some genuine, as we'll see, that really makes a big deal. You think for a second, like,
well, no, it just comes down to how many votes or who got how many electors from the Electoral
College. No, like the public opinion has a lot of sway in a situation
like this. So everything that happened publicly was a really big deal.
Yeah, absolutely. Olivia, who helped us out with this, did a bang up job by the way.
Fantastic, John. It was keen to point out that there were, you know,
a few states that they didn't have the full results about anyway
uh... or again has very famously long had a vote by mail system so
uh... it took a while to get all those votes in
uh... it eventually went goers way
uh... new mexico was uh... no one knew about new mexico until December 1st
uh... that eventually went goers way as well
and the republicans were like should we get a recount going in new mexico until December 1st, that eventually went goers way as well.
The Republicans were like, should we get a recount going in New Mexico and Wisconsin and
Iowa, but they basically, because the margins were pretty low, not enough to trigger any
kind of automatic recount.
But they thought about contesting those, but they would have had to win all of the states
that they were thinking about contesting.
The writing was on the wall that, like, hey, listen, we're not going to win all of these. So we're not going to contest
any of them. It's going to come down to Florida and we're going to put all of our eggs in
that basket.
Yeah, because Florida had 29 electoral votes and it could, it would put either one of them
in the, the, the White House. That's how close this race was. That those 29 electoral votes
going either way did it for for them. So in Florida, if you have a margin of victory that's
under 0.5% the total tally of votes, then there has to be a recount, a machine recount, where basically you run all the ballots
through again and see what the count is, right?
That's just law.
That's 0.5%.
This was 0.01% difference.
Out of 6 million votes cast in Florida in the 2000 general election, a few hundred votes separated one candidate for president
from another.
And again, because whoever one Florida became president, a few hundred votes is what it came
down to to determine who would become president at that time.
Yeah, because of how it works in the United States.
If you're not from the United
States, you can go back and listen to our electoral college episode.
Do you want to use angry? I know. Because no matter how you count the votes,
Al Gore won the popular vote just as Hillary Clinton won the popular vote in America,
it doesn't matter who gets the most votes because we have the EC in place.
But just a quick sketch of it though if anybody doesn't actually feel like going and listening
to the episode again, Chuck's right. It's worth listening to. But in the United States,
in a state who ever has the most votes gets usually all of the electors that that state has to offer.
And so in reality, what you're really running for as president is electors.
So you want to win states and you can strategically win some states over the others and lose the
popular vote and win the electoral college and still become president because you got more
electors, even though more Americans voted for the other person.
And that's the big controversy because it's super undemocratic
because the general population
doesn't actually decide, basically strategy decides.
It doesn't always wash out to be the person
who won the popular vote.
Well, since we're talking George Bush,
should we say, strategic?
Again, you can go back and listen to that episode
and we'll touch on that a little
bit at the end. But that's either here or there because we do have the EC and Florida
was very, very close and there were people in the, I mean, we knew it was going to be a tough
fight at that point because a, Jeb Bush is the governor of Florida, Georgia's brother.
The Secretary of State in Floridaan heros at the time
was co-chair of the bush campaign there
and the state attorney general uh... was a gorgi bob uh... butterworth so nuts was
the head of the gorg the gorg campaign so
this thing was just fraught from the jump
yeah well chuck i think with that it's a good place for break what. What do you say? All right, let's do it. We'll get right back. Okay
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What up, y'all. This is Prop. I host a podcast called The Politics with Prop.
I am a firm believer that if you grew up in some sort of struggle or inner city in America,
you understand politics more than you think you do. It's just not been translated in a language that you speak.
I am here to translate it for you.
For example, you know the filibuster is?
Yeah, you do.
Because if you got a mama that don't play no games,
you've been filibuster in your whole life.
Hey, mom, no, look, listen, listen, listen, my,
before you make your decision, what had happened was
when I came home, you know, I was with Joe.
You remember Joe from church, his mama
and the prayer group with you.
You remember Joe, so I took the chicken out group with you you remember Joe So I can't I took the chicken out like you said. I remember I took it because you said take the chicken out
I did you remember I got a a on that on that math test you remember I got that a
So I was gonna take that out and then work on you filibuster
You're just trying to stop her from making an immediate decision
That's all filibuster and is and the Congress do it all the time
See what I'm saying? Hey, you already know noticed stuff? So we take these seemingly complex high ideas and break them down in a way that you and
me actually talk.
So listen to her, politics with prop on the IHAR radio app Apple podcast or wherever
you get your podcast.
All right.
So here we are.
It's November.
People don't know who the president of the United States is going to be yet.
Things are starting to get pretty tense.
And America is going to start learning some very specific terms and ins and outs as far
as to how Florida conducted their elections at the time.
They used and a lot of the counties a punch card system where you had a little card puncher
and you would look at the candidate's name and there was a little perforated square beside that
and you would use your little puncher to punch that thing out.
The little square that gets removed is called a chad.
Depending on how punched out this chad was, determine whether or not your vote was counted.
There were a bunch of terms at the time that had to define what this all meant. A dimpled or
pregnant chad, which means you tried to punch it, and it was indented, but
it was still fully attached, was a dimpled or pregnant Chad.
You had the swinging door Chad where two corners are attached, and then you had a hanging
door Chad, or what eventually became known as just a hanging Chad, where you punch all
the way through, except one little corner remains attached. And that's the situation that determines the leader of the free world.
It's not right and weird.
But that was the situation.
Under Florida law, if you are an elections board in a county, during a recount, you have
to try to determine what the intent was of the voter.
Based on the ambiguous ballot they turned in, right?
Yeah, which is huge.
Like, again, the Florida law says the intent of the voter is what matters.
Right.
And that the election board during a recount has to determine what the intent is.
But there's no rules.
There's no statewide rules. There's really no rules
unless a canvas board like adopts them themselves to determine what a voter meant based on all
those different types of chads, right? So they made this up as they went along. Or in some cases,
counties already did have rules on the books as far as those chads go,
like Palm Beach County.
Yes.
Palm Beach County is a good example because Palm Beach County arguably is where the entire
election flipped.
Yeah.
But they had a policy that they'd had for 10 years since 1990 that said if you have a
dimpled or pregnant chat, it doesn't count.
It's a spoiled ballot and that vote doesn't count.
But if you have any kind of partially detached shed, swinging door, a tricorn or a hanging
shed, any of those, that counts as a vote.
Like the person clearly meant to vote using that.
They, during the recount, they just abandoned that and they tried something instead called
the light test
where you would, and there's pictures of people doing this,
where you would hold the ballot up to a light source
to see if any light's shown through.
And if you could, in the year 2000,
this is what we're doing.
If you could see any light, then that counted.
And they realized that actually,
that totally went against the rules,
that you could have a type of hanging Chad,
and light still not come through.
So that means you don't count that ballot,
and they just gave that up and went back
to the original rules.
This was the kind of catastrophe
that was going on during the recount in Florida,
and everyone was reporting about every single minute of it.
And the entire country was like, what is going on?
And the people in Florida who were in charge
of all the recounts are for wreaking out.
Because if you read about these boards,
they're like, they're not made for this kind of stuff.
They're not, this is all totally new.
And all of a sudden, the New York Times
and the Washington Post are standing over their shoulder
watching them and reporting on it.
And they're just flipping out.
So they're doing just all sorts of goofy stuff that just doesn't make any sense
because they're just like deer and headlights.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
And these aren't huge boards.
Like in one county, it was like three people.
Yeah, I think that was Dave County where Miami is.
Yeah, which is just nuts.
We should talk about the butter.
I don't know if I can.
This was the ballot in Palm Beach County.
You sent me a picture of what this ballot looked like.
I'm a reasonably intelligent adult human.
And I looked at this ballot, and it confused me a little bit.
You should just look up a picture of the Palm Beach
County Butterfly Ballet Bush Gourd election. But what it is, it's candidates on two sides,
like Butterfly wings, all the way down and in the center between all those are the little
punch holes. But here's the thing, is those, if you look at the two sides, they're, they're not aligned
all the straight away across. One's a little higher on the left, one's a little lower on the right,
and on the left, number one position is George Bush. Right under that is Al Gore. On the right,
number one position is Pat Buchanan, but the way it aligns, and there are little arrows that point at the holes,
but it's confusing, and it's very, it would be very easy to think, oh no, I don't want to vote for
Bush, I want to go down one and vote for Gore, but down one was actually on the other side,
slightly lower as Pat Buchanan. And it was just a very confusing ballot. And they found that Pat Buchanan got
about four times the vote in that county. Then he did nationwide. And that alone, and
I'm not saying no one knows what would have happened for sure. But it was a funky looking
ballot. Pat Buchanan had a very highly skewed amount of votes. And those amount of votes
would have firmly given Al Gore victory.
Yeah, and to make it even more confusing, the candidates were numbered, didn't even start with one and two.
It started with three.
And then Buchanan was four, Gore was five, Mac Reynolds was six, the parental was a socialist.
So there was one way that you could accidentally not vote for Bush.
You would accidentally vote for Buchanan below him.
There were two ways to accidentally not vote for Gore. You could accidentally vote for Buchanan above Gore or McRennel's below Gore. And like you said, Pep Buchanan is very instructive. The
number of votes he got from the butterfly ballots, even comparing other Palm Beach County voters
who voted by mail, Ebson T-entee ballot, that wasn't a butterfly ballot.
His numbers were way less compared to the butterfly ballot votes. So suffice to say that a lot
of people accidentally voted for Pat Buchanan who meant to vote for Al Gore or George Bush,
but probably more Al Gore because Palm Beach County is a strongly democratic county in Florida.
All right. So in Miami, Dade, which I think he said was the most populous Florida county,
initially that three person, that three person canvassing board said they were going to manually
recount 650,000 ballots. They realized that's overwhelming and probably impossible because it
was a looming deadline.
So they said, all right, why don't we just count the 10,750 ballots that the computer system rejected?
Because those are the ones that are in question and we feel pretty good that the other votes had been counted properly
because they were fully punched, no chat.
Right.
The GOP leaders said, hey, Camdenzing Board, uh, said, hey, Kim is in board.
You're trying to rig this in favor of Gore, uh, and they tried to get all the, uh, the
local Cuban Americans, while the upper and say, and like, hey, this is kind of stuff that
happens under Castro.
Like, you need to come down here and, and, and, and stage a, a protest, like this will not
stand.
And what ended up happening was what was
called the uh... Brooks brothers riot
because it was not uh... local cubans it was not in fact in most cases local
uh... floridians
they came to protest but it was washington dc
uh... political operatives and insiders that came down
and they gave themselves away by the clothes that they wore.
That's what it was called the Brooks Brothers riot. People at the time were saying like,
and they were trying to deny it, saying they were like local Floridians and they're like, well,
you're certainly not dressed like somebody from Miami. You've got a Brooks Brothers
suit coat on, sport coat on. In fact, most of you do. And they went down there and they were successful.
They gathered in the plaza. They screamed voter-fraud. They were banging on windows and handing
out crying towels and saying, you're a sore loser. And it worked. They succumbed to the
pressure and stopped the recount.
Yeah. So, by the way, Ted Cruz was one of those operatives who was in the riot, essentially fake riot.
Although if you read an interview, there's a, I think, a Washington Post interview with
Brad Blakeman, who is the guy who was responsible for staging this protest and organizing it,
that he sounds like he genuinely believed that this canvassing board was trying to throw
the election to go, and and that really fueled a lot
of it.
So it's difficult in that respect to fault him and his group for protesting like that.
On the other hand, it's very clear that this Brooks Brothers riot, they were accused of
violence against election officials.
They were at the very least, very hostile in your face.
Again, these canvassing boards are not cut out for this kind of life.
They didn't know what the heck they were signing up for.
And the Brooks Brothers rioters essentially intimidated them out of this very democratic
process of recounting by hand ballots that had been rejected by the computer.
There was no evidence whatsoever
that the computer was selectively rejecting
Gore ballots in order for him to come in
and clinch the presidency in a very dramatic win
in Miami-Dade.
It doesn't make any sense that that would have favored Gore.
What they were doing was trying to stop the recount in the Bush was ahead because Bush
was ahead.
That was the entire point on November 9th.
The Secretary of State Catherine Harris was trying to certify the election because Bush
had 327 more votes than Gore.
And so what these Republican operatives were doing in the Brooks Brothers, right, was trying
to stop the count right there to keep George Bush's lead.
That was their goal.
So it seems like Blakeman's view that what they were doing was illegal may or may not
be disingenuous.
I'm not sure.
Right.
Yeah.
So these recounts are happening in the Secretary of State Harris, like you said,
all of a sudden the Florida State Supreme Court got involved. And she wanted to certify, like you
said, on the 14th, but the Supreme Court said, no, you have to count all the votes. You can't
certify the election. You need to count them all. You can't just throw out the votes that are in dispute.
So there are four counties that you need to do a hand recount on. And over the next
a month between November and December, there were more than 50 lawsuits being filed
by all sides. Everyone all over the place is filing lawsuits about recounting and counting
and deadlines and different various counties across Florida.
And eventually on December 8th, the Florida Supreme Court came out and it's very important.
And rule 4-3 that you have to count what's called the under votes, meaning these votes that are unclear,
that the Bush campaign wanted to just throw out, you got to count all these votes.
And if you haven't done that yet in these counties,
you got to do it.
The Bush campaign said, well,
we don't want to count all the votes
because where ahead, the Gore campaign said,
well, great, count all the votes.
That's democracy at work.
And so the Supreme Court of the United States gets involved and all
of a sudden on December 11th, you are getting oral arguments on the Supreme Court of the
United States about how, like basically, a lot of things, um, chiefly one of which is, should
the federal government get involved when states are supposed to run their own elections?
Yeah, I say we take a little break and just prepare ourselves for the catastrophe that is Bush v. Gore.
What do you say?
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What up, y'all?
This is Prop.
I host a podcast called The Politics with Prop.
I am a firm believer that if you grew up in some sort of struggle or inner city in America,
you understand politics more than you think you do.
It's just not been translated in the language that you speak.
I am here to translate it for you.
For example, you know the filibuster is?
Yeah, you do.
Because if you got a mama that don't play no games, you can filibuster in your whole life.
Hey, mom, no, look, listen, listen, listen, listen, mom.
Before you make your decision, what had happened was
when I came home, you know, I was with Joe.
You remember Joe from church, his mom in the prayer group
with you, you remember Joe, so I took the chicken out.
Like you said, I remember, I took the chicken
because you said take the chicken out.
Did you remember I got an A on that map test?
You remember I got that A, so I was gonna take that out
and then work on you filibuster.
You're just trying to stop her from making an immediate
decision, that's all filibuster in it,
and the Congress do it all the time.
See what I'm saying, how you already noticed up?
So we take these seemingly complex, high ideas
and break them down in a way that you and me actually talk.
So listen to her, politics with prop
on the I-Hard Radio app, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
hard radio app Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcast.
So Chuck, like you said, the Florida Supreme Court said, no, you need to hand count all of those ballots at the computers rejected to figure out who won and the Bush campaign sued to get that stopped and got
it picked up by the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court on December 9th issued a stay very strange that is very unusual for
the Supreme Court to get involved in a state court ruling.
Federalism basically said, they don't do that.
Stop. Stop.
Yeah, a stay was, stop the hand count.
Don't do that anymore.
And then, even more unusual,
without the Bush campaign petitioning
for the Supreme Court to hear the case,
the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case.
And what they did was, take this up.
It sounds confusing.
But, yeah, no one in the Bush camp asked the Supreme Court
to decide on the merits of the case
and yet the Supreme Court decided
to decide on the merits of the case.
And again, this is highly unusual.
A state Supreme Court ruling for a state matter
is pretty much sacri-sanked in Supreme Court,
like US Supreme Court tradition. Supreme Court does not
get involved in that kind of stuff. And they said, Hey, let's get involved in this, this horn
it's nest right now. Yeah, exactly. So what we ended up with, we're a couple of rulings.
There was a seven to two ruling that it violated the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment because the argument
from the Bush side was, hey, listen, there isn't a codified statewide way that everyone
has agreed to do these recounts. And so that violates the equal protection clause.
And on the gore side, he was saying, well, there is a codified way, maybe not in the way they do it, but the law is intent to vote.
And that's on the book.
So that's how we should decide.
Right.
And so the idea of applying the Equal Protection Clause doesn't really make sense because
in America, every state has different ways of voting, not just among the states, but
among the counties in an individual state.
It's all over the place.
Like it's up to the county to decide
what kind of voting machines they wanna use,
how many to have, like it's up to,
generally the county, if not the state, right?
So that's a really weird thing to say,
no, this particular state is violating
the equal protection clause.
So we're gonna say, stop doing this hand count.
We're gonna rule in favor of that because of the equal protection clause. So we're going to say, stop doing this hand count. We're going to rule in favor
of that because of the equal protection clause. And then secondly, the other thing about the
equal protection clause, Chuck, is what they were saying was everyone is not going to have their vote
counted because it's because of the inequity and how you vote. So what we're going to do is just
make sure we don't count some people's votes to protect them
and keep them equal.
Doesn't make any sense whatsoever.
Yeah.
And on that first point, I believe it was either briar or suitor in the dissent said,
kind of pointed out what you were saying was saying like, well, hey, if this, that means
that, that no state has a fair election.
Right.
Because every single state in every single county like you said has different like Josh Clark one day say he said.
Has different ways of doing things so if you say that about this then no no state has a.
A free election or a fair election or whatever everything is called into question right and that can't be the case.
The other concurring decision was even more important. And I think we said
it was seven to two because Breyer and Souter actually, as quote unquote liberal justices
cited with the quote unquote conservative side, which is so weird because it's such a
bad legal argument. I know. I don't know. Well, it's interesting. Maybe it wasn't Souter
or Breyer than that said what I said. It was probably John Paul Stevens. Yeah, I think it was Stevens.
But the concurring, and this is really the most important
decision, which was a 5'4 ruling on, you know,
I know they're supposed to be impartial,
but there were five conservative justices at the time
for liberal justices and it ended up a 5'4
concurrent ruling that not only can you not do do the recount but like there's no time
and because of uh... what's called save harbor
which is this date
uh... a deadline for states to resolve issues
over the selection of their state electors and that was approaching
uh... whereas the liberal justice is said well hold on
that doesn't mean
that's not when they cast their vote
at the electoral college.
There's still six days after that.
There's plenty, A, there's plenty of time to do that.
And B, had you not issued a state to begin with,
they would be done by now, probably,
and we wouldn't have even been called on.
So we ended up causing a problem with this state
that we are now ruling on by instituting
that stay.
They caused the problem.
It's just perfectly put.
They caused the problem that they were saying was the problem and the reason that they
were saying you have to stop the recount.
It's too late.
Isn't that nuts?
Yeah.
RBG and her very famously in her descent usually say, I respectfully descent.
And she just said, I descent, which was done sound like a big deal, but those words matter.
And it was a big deal.
And she was also like saying, hey, wait a minute, this contradicts all of our federalist
principles that this is a state matter.
And that we shouldn't get involved with this to begin with. So it was a not only a landmark ruling, but one that was just
fraught with upset on all sides up and down the political spectrum and to the citizens of the
United States. Even more suspiciously, there's a really great article from the Nevada law journal
from 2012 written by Marques Broden.
And he points out there was a lot of books written about this afterward.
And he said that at least three
of the conservative justices had like personal,
what's it called when you're supposed
to recuse yourself?
I guess conflicts of interest.
Yeah, yeah.
One was that Scalia's son's law firm was arguing the case
and friend of the Supreme Court for the Bush side.
Yeah.
Another was that Clarence Thomas' wife, Ginny,
was looking for, was like accepting resumes
on behalf of the Heritage Foundation
to set up a Bush administration.
And then thirdly, I think Sandra Day O'Connor.
Yeah, she was trying to retire, I think.
Yes, she wanted to retire.
So she didn't want Goa to win
because she didn't want to have to stay on
for four more years so that a Democrat
wouldn't pick her replacement.
So these three had like actual like personal vested interests
in the outcome of this election.
Three of the five did at least.
And even putting that aside,
the fact that the Supreme Court got involved in the first place was a terrible idea.
The fact that they decided the election was a terrible idea, the legal idea that they
ruled on was terrible, and then the idea that anybody had even an eye-oda of personal
interest in the outcome was a really big deal.
And today the Supreme Court is definitely under question
as far as political activism's concerned.
And I'm sure it has been for a while,
but it really feels like common knowledge these days.
Yeah.
In 2000, that was really new.
That was a really big deal.
People thought very, very differently
about the Supreme Court in 2000
compared to how they think about them today. Yeah. And on those, a couple of things you mentioned,
um, Scalia's son, who was part of the law firm that argued the bush case, he, uh, very soon after
the election was given a cabinet position, right? Right. Uh, and Sandra Day O'Connor, this isn't
just speculation that she wanted to retire.
Like, wasn't she, it was either on tape or like, people that were with her when they called it
initially for Gore, like said, she was like, all crap basically. Yeah. Like, this means I got to
work another four years. She said, this was, this is, this is terrible. And her husband explained
that they had been planning on retiring, but now she couldn't if Gore won.
All right.
So just want to clear up that wasn't just like, you know, I'm some of the pain that we're
loving out there.
Right.
And then sorry, there's one more legal thing that Gore camp really dropped the ball because
legally, the Bush campaign had no legal standing in this matter.
They weren't the Indra Party.
The Indra Party was the potentially disenfranchised voters. They weren't the injured party. The injured party was the potentially
disenfranchised voters of Florida, not the Bush campaign, so the Bush campaign had no
standing to bring this case to the Supreme Court in the first place. And the Gore team
didn't even mention it. And that might have been the thing that put enough public pressure on
the Supreme Court to just toss it and say, no, whatever the Florida Supreme Court said stays.
And they just dropped the ball that hard.
Yeah.
And this isn't a surmising because we're not smart enough, legally speaking, like, multitudes
of legal scholars have come out and said, like, why didn't they argue standing?
Like that, that was what would have changed the outcome.
Yeah.
It's crazy.
How many just small things would have changed the outcome?
Let's talk about that.
Uh, sure. It's crazy how many just small things would have changed the outcome. Let's talk about that.
Sure. So Libya appropriately calls this autopsy report because after something like this, they don't just go, all right, well, that was that went as it should go and everything was super
smooth. I mean, regardless of who won or lost, if it would have been gourd, it would have been
same thing. It would have been like boy, what a mess. Right. This is not how elections are
supposed to be decided in the United States.
So afterward, there were all kinds of studies,
all kinds of people writing legal papers
and just really studying the data.
The University of Chicago's National Opinion Research Center,
which is an independent organization.
They did a review and they said,
what we found out was that more Florida voters attempted to vote for Gore,
but enough of them like, you know, marked their ballots inappropriately. And that not only that,
but like each side would try to do things that would have hurt their own camp. Like, I believe it was
Gore was trying to get these four counties hand-recounted.
That actually would have ended up helping Bush. At one point, Bush was trying to make the
detached at two corners vote count. That would have helped Gore. It was just a big play
to spaghetti as far as the time, because they were all just sort of
very quickly in real time reacting to things that they never thought they would have to
react to and sometimes doing things that would have even hurt their chances at winning.
Yeah, and another study found that just in Palm Beach County alone, the overvotes, people who
voted for more than one person, where there were just two, the
ones that went to that included PEP you can in, they decided about 75% of those were because
of ballot design.
And I think 2,000 votes would have gone to Al Gore, which would have flipped the entire
state, because George Bush won Florida by 537 votes, right? So it's not 100% clear what would have happened because even if that recount would have gone
on, other studies have shown like, no, actually Bush might have still won based on the autopsy
we conducted.
So it's still in 2023, not clear who actually won the 2000 election. Yeah, and if you're asking yourself like,
all right Florida had a law in place about intent to vote
as like that's what matters.
One way that you can measure intent
is like to look at that Chad and see,
you know, it was clearly trying to be punched for a candidate.
Another way you can do that is as a right to remedy.
You can get in touch
with people and say, all right, you got another chance, it looks like you marked your ballot
in an inconsistent way. Try again, and they did this in different counties, in some counties
in Florida, which it really helped, it led to an error rate of less than 1%. But in the
only predominantly black county in the state of Florida at the time,
Gadsden County, they did not allow them to remedy the ballots and there was a 12.4%
invalidated ballot rate compared to under 1%. So there's just hinky stuff going on all
over the place.
Yeah. And Bushfeet Gore is like a toxic zombie legal case that won't die and should have never
happened in the first place, but there is a really strange appendage to that that we've talked
about before. I think in our Supreme Court precedent, judicial precedence episode. Yeah, I think so.
Where they said that it's limited to the present circumstances. And as that Mark Bowden guy wrote
in the Nevada Law Review, they basically attached like a warning sign, like warning do not use this as precedent. Essentially
Supreme Court's just deciding the president here and it this doesn't apply to any other
ruling because it shouldn't have happened anyway in the first place, right? And yet it's
still cited as precedent all over the place. It's it's it's cited by both sides actually even though it shouldn't be whatsoever.
And that's just one of this kind of afterlife of the 2000 election that's still going on.
Yeah, absolutely. A lot of things have changed since then. Ralph Nader, for the green party,
certainly did not win any friends on the left because he got close to 100,000 votes in Florida, you know, most of which probably would have gone to Al Gore.
And he ran again, even though everyone was like, I love you, Nader, but stop screwing up
the elections if you're a Democrat.
Right.
And he was like, yeah, no, Kerry, you know, I believe in what I'm doing.
And so he ran again in 2004, you know, as far as mounting a third party bid that it's certainly put a damper on that.
A lot of people will say the two party system being so locked in stone is one of the big problems
in this country.
And another thing that happened was states immediately were like, oh boy, we can't do
this again.
Florida for sure. And other states were like these punch cards.
We got to get into the, we got to get with the times here and have a more secure way of
voting than just people punching a card like it's 1875.
You will see no more chads.
All these changes, sort of nationwide from state to state, culminated in the most recent 2020 election wherein Donald Trump's own Department of Homeland Security and Cyber Security
and Infrastructure Security Agency said was the most secure election in American history
with no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes, or was in any
way compromised.
So thankfully so many changes were put in place
to make sure something like this didn't happen again.
Yeah, and the electoral college is kind of this weird wonky thing that happened in the background until 2000.
And it really kind of brought to the fore like what a potent and also undemocratic institution this is.
And so a lot of people are like, we need to get rid of this thing. And apparently in 2020, Paul by the Pew Organization, 58% of American adults
said they would support a constitutional amendment that said the electoral college is no
envoyed. Well, you're never going to get that on about it. I don't know, man. I don't know.
I don't understand why it's not already. It is such an enormous problem.
Yeah, I wish there were more, what do you call those referendums?
Yeah.
Where they would just let human,
the American public vote on things
rather than people to decide the things.
Well, that's what's been going on with abortion access.
They've been strategically purposefully
getting them on ballots that don't have other politicians
to get people to just vote on the one issue.
On an issue.
It is a great idea because then you actually see what the people actually think about it.
I think that's a great idea too, Chuck.
However, any of it goes, let people decide because I think we've all seen that elected representatives,
you know, they don't always necessarily reflect the will of their people, you know what I'm
saying?
No, and another thing is, I mean, pretty much everybody on both sides can point to Congress
and be like, you guys don't do enough these days.
If voters voted on referenda, then, you know, the voters could do the work that Congress is supposed
to be doing, passing laws.
Yeah, well, they don't want to do that because one of those first referenda would be term
limits.
And they're like, oh, no, let's not do that.
Are you got anything else?
Oh, man, I've got nothing else.
I can't wait till next November.
That's going to be a lot of fun.
I don't know if I can do it Chuck.
Um, well since Chuck's just laughed at my pain, I think everybody is time for listener mail.
Oh, this one's a great one.
This is from Dan, uh, Sheeplin.
And Dan, well, I'm just gonna read it.
This is pretty amazing.
Okay.
I hope you saw this one if not.
You should go look it up.
Okay. Hey guys, as I write you, I'm
in sconce in the warm cab of a caterpillar tractor, jostling along the snow covered
Ross-I-shelf on my way to the Amundsen Scott South Pole Station. I did not see this.
This is cool. He included a picture of this caravan. Five days ago when we left,
Mika Murdo station on Ross Island, the
starting point of the South Pole, traversed. We were 1,038 miles from the South Pole.
My current ground speed is 7.1 miles per hour, which is a pretty good pace.
Our speed can be much slower at times depending on snow and a variety of
other conditions. There are 14 of us who embarked on this 25-30-day journey.
Each in our own tractor, hauling
mostly fuel to resupply the South Pole station, but also cargo and the living modules where
we eat and sleep and use the bathroom.
Our toilet is called the Ensenolet, and you guessed it, it's a turd-burning rig, very
glamorous. So there are, in these tractorsors just slow rolling it to the South Pole.
That's a main...
...deliver supplies and fuel.
That's really amazing stuff.
Uh, he, he had a picture of this caravan.
It's so cool.
Uh, as you can imagine, have a lot of time sitting in this tractor, and quite a bit of
that time is dedicated to listening to podcasts.
Yours included.
Been a faithful listener since 2010.
Uh, we have a whiteboard inside our galley and a post daily, a podcast recommendation.
And today I put up naked mole rats, a face only a mother could love.
Because that one blew my mind, guys.
How can they be so interesting?
And that's from Dan Schifflin, and he says big shout out to his wife, Marcie, as well
as the guys on the traverse. So, man, you don't think about people out there doing
these wacky jobs, but Dan and the gang out there
on the slow train are doing it.
That's really cool.
Thanks a lot, Dan, shout out to Marcy,
for putting up with Dan driving around the South Pole
on the slow train.
Yeah.
And thanks for the picture too, Dan.
I'm looking for I can't find it right now.
So send it to me where he picture too Dan. I'm looking for I can't find it right now so send it to me where you chuck.
I will.
If you want to be like Dan and just blow our minds with a picture of where you are or
some info about what you do, we would love that.
You can blow our minds by wrapping that information up into an email and sending it off to Stuff
Podcast at iHeartRadio.com. Stuff you should know is a production of iHeartRadio.com.
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Hey, this is Prop from the Hill of Politics
for Prop Podcasts.
And this what we do here,
we take all these highfalutin political ideas
and things in the news and explain it to you in the language that we all speak in.
Just like, I don't know, take filibuster.
Believe it or not, you already know what that is, because if you got a mama that don't
play no games, you can filibuster in your whole life.
Hey mom, no look, listen, listen, listen, listen, before you make your decision, what
had happened was everything said after that is filibuster, you just trying to stall her
out to avoid the inevitable.
Congress do it all the time.
See you already knew.
So listen to her, pilot six, we're prop on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever
you get your podcasts.
It's a weird world out there, so lean into the weirdness with the stuff to blow your mind
podcast.
Explore the nature of dreams and how dreaming has influenced culture.
Appreciate the deep strangeness of terrestrial biology, as well as purely imagine creatures that reveal much about human nature.
Explore topics scientific, historical, philosophical, and sometimes monstrous
on stuff to blow your mind.
Listen to the stuff to blow your mind on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
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Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.