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2004 Washington gubernatorial election

The 2004 Washington gubernatorial election was held on November 2, 2004. The race gained national attention for its legal twists and extremely close finish, among the closest political races in United States election history. Republican Dino Rossi was declared the winner in the initial automated count and again in a subsequent automated recount, but after a second recount done by hand, Democrat Christine Gregoire took the lead by a margin of 129 votes.

2004 Washington gubernatorial election

← 2000 November 2, 2004 2008 →
 
Nominee Christine Gregoire Dino Rossi
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 1,373,361 1,373,228
Percentage 48.873% 48.868%

County results
Gregoire:      40–50%      50–60%
Rossi:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%

Governor before election

Gary Locke
Democratic

Elected Governor

Christine Gregoire
Democratic

Although Gregoire was sworn in as governor of Washington on January 12, 2005, Rossi did not formally concede and called for a re-vote over concerns about the integrity of the election. The Republican Party filed a lawsuit in Chelan County Superior Court contesting the election, but the trial judge ruled against it, citing lack of evidence of deliberate electoral sabotage.[1] Rossi chose not to appeal to the Washington State Supreme Court, formally conceding the election on June 6, 2005.

Primary elections

The 2004 election cycle was the first in Washington to use a party-line ballot system of holding primary elections. The state had a long tradition of using blanket primaries, where the candidates of all political parties appear together on the same ballot for all voters. In this system, the leading vote-getter from each party advances to the general election. Washington's voters are not registered by party affiliation and a voter could participate in selecting candidates for more than one party, although the voter could only choose one candidate (of whatever party) for each office.

In February 2004 the United States Supreme Court declined to review a lower court decision striking down the blanket primary as unconstitutional, based on it violating the rights of the parties to freedom of association under the First Amendment. Washington was thus forced to devise a new primary election system. The state legislature passed a bill providing that the top two vote-getters for each office in the primary would advance to the general election, regardless of which political party they belonged to. Voters would still be allowed to vote for any candidate as before. However, this measure was vetoed by Governor Gary Locke in favor of a Montana-style system that requires voters to choose a ballot for one specific party and vote only on that party's candidates in the primary.

The primary election in 2004 was held using the new system, but a campaign to replace it was already underway. The Washington State Grange, which had helped institute the blanket primary in 1935, filed Initiative 872 to implement the "top-two" primary instead, which would once again allow voters to cross party lines in the primary election but now send the top two vote-getters to the general election. In districts dominated by one party, the top-two system could result in Democrat- or Republican-only general election races. Supporters claimed it would bring back voter choice across party lines and allow independent voters to participate in the primary; opponents said it would exclude third parties and independent candidates from general election ballots, and would in fact reduce general election voter choice. The initiative was put to a public vote in November 2004, and passed with 60% of the vote.[2] The state Republican, Democratic and Libertarian parties sued,[3] however, and a federal district court judge ruled in 2005 that the measure was unconstitutional because it too infringed the parties' First Amendment right to select their own candidates.[4] Washington continued with the party-line primary system while appealing the case.[5]

Democratic primary

In July 2003, incumbent governor Gary Locke indicated that he would not seek a third term, opening up the Democratic primary to alternate candidates. Former Washington State Supreme Court justice Phil Talmadge was the first candidate to enter the race for the Democratic primary, challenging Gary Locke before he announced his retirement, but Washington Attorney-General Christine Gregoire quickly became the frontrunner, leading in fundraising and endorsements. King County Executive Ron Sims announced his candidacy, but failed to garner much interest. According to a March 2004, Mellman Group poll, Gregoire would beat both Sims and Talmadge 36% to 11% and four percent in an open primary, and would beat Sims 55% to 17% in a closed primary.[6] On April 29, 2004, Talmadge announced he was withdrawing from the race following the discovery of a benign kidney tumor, citing the likely need for surgery and associated recovery time.

Candidate Home city Total votes Percentage
Christine Gregoire Auburn 504,018 65.62%
Ron Sims Seattle 228,306 29.72%
Mike The Mover Lynnwood 15,118 1.96%
Don Hansler Spanaway 8,636 1.12%
Scott Headland Tacoma 6,983 0.90%
Eugen Buculei Bellevue 5,005 0.65%

Republican primary

The Washington State Republican Party struggled to find a candidate through most of 2003 when presumed candidate Bob Herbold, a former Executive Vice President and COO of Microsoft, declined to run. They finally recruited Dino Rossi, a relatively obscure political figure who left the state Senate to pursue a gubernatorial run due to state elected officials being prohibited from raising money while the legislature is in session.

Candidate Home city Total votes Percentage
Dino Rossi Sammamish 444,337 85.14%
Bill Meyer Bellingham 44,448 8.51%
John W. Aiken Jr. Medical Lake 33,104 6.34%

Libertarian primary

The Libertarian Party of Washington State race was between Ruth Bennett, former state chair of the party in Washington and Colorado, and Michael Nelson.

Candidate Home city Total votes Percentage
Ruth Bennett Seattle 7,382 56.48%
Michael Nelson Seattle 5,687 43.51%

General election

Campaign

Both Gregoire and Rossi ran as centrists and promised to change the political landscape in Washington, and both made job and economic growth the centerpiece of their campaigns.

The Rossi campaign presented its own job-growth plan, and stated that 20 years of Democratic governors were to blame for the economic troubles in the state. However, during the general election he was criticized for a strongly conservative voting record that was at odds with his moderate campaign posture. Rossi was also criticized for his long-time professional association with a real estate broker convicted of fraud, and for alleged résumé embellishments. Rossi had worked against Roe v. Wade, attacked opponents for supporting gay rights, and proclaimed that creationism should be taught in public schools. Rossi campaigned on being anti-abortion and in favor of state and federal Constitutional Amendments that would ban certain benefits for gay couples. He downplayed his long history of conservative comments and claimed to be a "fiscal moderate with a social conscience." Rossi would not publicly state his opinion over stem cell research.

The Gregoire campaign promised to boost job growth in the state which had slowed greatly after the dot-com bubble burst in 2000, to improve education, and to increase access to health care. It also focused on Gregoire's record of challenging big tobacco and pharmaceutical companies in her tenure as state Attorney-General. Gregoire also proposed a major state-led initiative in life sciences, especially stem cell research, where she proposed investing US$500 million of a tobacco settlement the state hoped to receive in 2008. Her economic plan for the state focused on improving state infrastructure and improving the quality of education in the state, which she claimed would attract investors. Gregoire also stated that she believed Washington residents should be allowed to buy prescription medicine from Canada, while Rossi said that he needed to be convinced it "was safe".[7] Gregoire was criticized for being a part of the state government establishment, but tried to counter Rossi's "time for a change" message by saying that she would "blow past the bureaucracy" and bring change herself. This language surprised and disappointed many of her colleagues and supporters, who saw it as a failure to give mention or credit to the efforts and achievements of past Democratic governors.

Gregoire was also strongly criticized in many attack ads for an incident which occurred in 2000, when Gregoire's office failed to file documents on time to appeal a record $17.8 million personal-injury verdict against Washington. Documents from an independent investigation conducted at the time of the incident show that Gregoire's deputies attempted to influence who was listed as responsible for the missed deadline. A further case Gregoire was strongly criticized for occurred in 2002 during a wrongful death lawsuit when Gregoire's office did not detect an error in jury instructions. The state was forced to pay $22.4 million to the plaintiff. While Gregoire was not directly responsible for these offenses, the Rossi campaign claimed that she had already cost Washington taxpayers millions of dollars and was negligent.

Rossi won the endorsement of the Republican Party, the National Rifle Association, The Seattle Times, several business and medical associations, and former governor Dan Evans. Gregoire received the endorsement of the Democratic Party, GLAAD, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, abortion rights organizations, and all the previous Democratic governors of the state. However, the Republican Party decided not to fund ads for Rossi in the state as polls leading up to the election date showed Gregoire with a clear lead.[8] Almost all of Rossi's ads were paid for and created by outside sources, although as Gregoire's lead narrowed closer to the election date, the Republican Party ultimately decided to launch a series of advertisements for Rossi.

Ruth Bennett's campaign focused on permitting same-sex marriage in the state and economic liberalization in line with the political philosophy of libertarianism. She also recommended equally dividing the state budget among the counties and allowing the counties to establish tax systems on a county-by-county basis, ultimately leading to a diminished role of Washington's Department of Revenue.

Gregoire led in almost all polls conducted leading up to the election, but Rossi was able to close in on her late in the race and won considerable support from Eastern Washington. He also ran much stronger than expected in Snohomish and Pierce Counties. Gregoire received strong support (nearly a three-to-two margin) from the largest county in the state, King County, which includes heavily Democratic Seattle. During the initial ballot count, the lead changed hands several times.

 
2004 gubernatorial election county map of Washington. Map does not show population or percentile.
  Won by Rossi
  Won by Gregoire

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
Sabato's Crystal Ball[9] Lean R (flip) November 1, 2004

Polling

Pollster Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Christine
Gregoire (D)
Dino
Rossi (R)
Other /
Undecided
Reference
SurveyUSA October 29–31, 2004 620 (LV) ± 4.0% 45% 51% 4% [10]
Strategic Vision October 24-27, 2004 801 (LV) ± 3.0% 47% 42% 11% [11]
Mason-Dixon October 25–26, 2004 800 (RV) ± 3.5% 48% 43% 9% [11]
Elway Poll October 14–16, 2004 405 (RV) ± 5.0% 45% 38% 17% [11]

Initial results

Washington is unusual for a U.S. state in that it only requires that an absentee ballot be postmarked by the day of the election to be valid, while most other states require the ballot to have arrived at the election office by that time. Due to this as well as the state's high number of absentee ballots—more than 60% of all King County voters voted absentee—the initial result of the election was not known until November 17, the last day under state law for election results to be certified by each county's election officials.

The initial result, as reported by Secretary of State Sam Reed, showed Rossi with a lead of 261 votes, well within the margin for an automatic machine recount pursuant to Washington state law (less than 0.5% and less than 2,000 votes). After a statewide recount completed on November 24, Rossi again came away with the lead, this time by 42 votes.[12]

Manual recount

After Rossi was certified as the victor on November 29, the Washington State Secretary of State said that "a manual recount was almost a certainty." This view was shared by the Gregoire campaign, with campaign spokesman Morton Brilliant saying that "if all the ballots aren't counted, we will go through the next four years with one candidate's supporters not believing the winner was legitimately elected." and that it was "worth taking three weeks to have four years of legitimacy, and that's what is at stake."[13]

In Washington, a candidate may request one hand count or machine count, provided that they pay for the estimated cost of the recount up front.[14] If a manual recount overturns the outcome of an election, the state will then refund the money to the candidate.[14] On December 3, the Washington State Democratic Party gave a $730,000 check to the Secretary of State for the statewide manual recount of nearly 3 million ballots.[14] The Secretary of State issued the order for a recount on Monday, December 6. The next day, attorneys for the Democratic Party and the Secretary of State argued before the Washington State Supreme Court over terms for the recount.[12] The Democrats argued for a universal standard to be applied to the manual recount, and for the retabulation of votes over simply recanvassing them.[12] Attorneys for the Secretary of State replied saying that any retabulation of votes would be a violation of state election laws and the Washington State Constitution.[12] Two days later, the Supreme Court issued their opinion and rejected universal standards in the statewide recount.[15]

Discovered ballots

King County Council Chairman Larry Phillips was at a Democratic Party office in Seattle on Sunday December 12, reviewing a list of voters whose absentee votes had been rejected due to signature problems, when to his surprise he found his own name listed. Phillips said he was certain he had filled out and signed his ballot correctly, and asked the county election officials to investigate the discrepancy. They discovered that Phillips' signature had somehow failed to be scanned into the election computer system after he submitted his request for an absentee ballot. Election workers claimed that they had received Phillips' absentee ballot in the mail, but they could not find his signature in the computer system to compare to the one on the ballot envelope, so they mistakenly rejected the ballot instead of following the standard procedure of checking it against the signature of Phillips' physical voter registration card that was on file. The discovery prompted King County Director of Elections Dean Logan to order his staff to search the computers to see if any other ballots had been incorrectly rejected.

Logan announced on December 13 that 561 absentee ballots in the county had been wrongly rejected due to an administrative error.[16] The next day, workers retrieving voting machines from precinct storage found an additional 12 ballots, bringing the total to 572 newly discovered ballots. Logan admitted the lost ballots were an oversight on the part of his department, and insisted that the found ballots be counted. On December 15, the King County Canvassing Board voted 2-1 in favor of counting the discovered ballots.

Upon examination of the discovered ballots, it was further discovered that, with the exception of two ballots, none of the ballots had been cast by voters whose surnames began with the letters A, B, or C.[17] There was a further search for more ballots, and on December 17, county workers discovered a tray in a warehouse with an additional 162 previously uncounted ballots.[17] All together, 723 uncounted or improperly rejected ballots were discovered in King County during the manual hand recount.

Chairman of the Washington State Republican Party Chris Vance stated that he was "absolutely convinced that King County is trying to steal this election." The National Rifle Association, which had endorsed Rossi, sent a mass e-mail on December 14 to its members asking for volunteers to go to King County in order to sit in on the county elections office and observe the recount.

The Washington State Republican Party filed a restraining order in Pierce County District Court, requesting an injunction against King County to block the tabulation of the uncounted ballots.[18] The request was granted on December 17, but Democrats appealed to the Supreme Court. On December 22, the court ruled against the Republican Party and overturned the restraining order, allowing King County to count all ballots.[18] The next day, Sam Reed issued a statement explaining the process for certification of the uncounted ballots and the standards for fair voting practices in the state.[19]

After all other counties submitted their recount votes, it was revealed on December 20 that at least five other counties besides King County had included ballots that had been discovered after the initial count. For example, Snohomish County included 224 missed ballots that had been discovered underneath mail trays. The outcome of the State Supreme Court hearing regarding King County's votes could have potentially affected those counties' counts as well.

Final results

The state Democratic party claimed on December 21 that the result of the manual recount, including King County's votes, placed Gregoire ahead by eight votes across the state. Later, on December 22, the preliminary recount results put Gregoire at a ten-vote lead.

Washington state law allows for election officials to evaluate voter intent and correct ballots so that the machines can properly read them. For example, on a Scantron or other optical ballot, an election official might fill in a circle that was not properly marked so that the machine may record the vote. Republicans filed a federal lawsuit to stop the visual examination of ballots, claiming that it is not allowed under federal law (Equal Protection clause of the 14th Amendment). The Republican Party was contending that the method King County was using was different from that of other counties, therefore treating voters in King County differently from those in others. However, the court ruled that this was not the case, as King County was counting their ballots in a manner similar to that of other counties.

A Pierce County Superior Court judge ruled that ballots should not be counted, but on December 22, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously that counties explicitly have the ability to correct ballot consideration errors made during earlier counts. Of those 732 ballots, 566 were accepted as having valid signatures and were added to the existing total on December 23. The final results of the hand count, as of December 23,[20] had Christine Gregoire ahead by 130 votes, which was later revised to 129 when it was discovered that Thurston County had added a vote after certification had been completed.[21] Since the recount results were in favor of the party requesting the recount, the Democrats were reimbursed the recount costs they had advanced to the state.

The Republicans were already preparing for further legal action before the final tally was announced by canvassing Republican voters whose ballots had been rejected. On December 29, Rossi called for a re-vote, saying that "this election has been a total mess" and that a "revote would be the best solution for the people of our state and would give us a legitimate governorship". This solution had been rejected by the Democrats and Republican Secretary of State Sam Reed because Washington's election law contains no re-vote provision, which left a lawsuit the only other option. Reed officially certified the results of the manual recount on December 30, declaring Gregoire the governor-elect.

Results of recounts

County Christine Gregoire (D) Dino Rossi (R) Ruth Bennett (L)
Initial
result1
Machine
recount2
Manual
recount3
Gain /
loss
Initial
result1
Machine
recount2
Manual
recount3
Gain /
loss
Initial
result1
Machine
recount2
Manual
recount3
Gain /
loss
Adams 1,517 1,529 1,529 0 3,459 3,486 3,481 -5 79 81 81 0
Asotin 3,524 3,525 3,530 +5 4,905 4,904 4,914 +10 193 193 193 0
Benton 19,830 19,831 19,834 +3 44,888 44,890 44,895 +5 1,119 1,118 1,118 0
Chelan 10,074 10,077 10,077 0 18,436 18,437 18,438 +1 523 523 523 0
Clallam 16,225 16,226 16,230 +4 18,831 18,832 18,836 +4 919 919 920 +1
Clark 72,797 72,800 72,828 +28 85,887 85,894 85,924 +30 4,123 4,123 4,123 0
Columbia 670 671 671 0 1,370 1,370 1,371 +1 37 37 37 0
Cowlitz 20,236 20,207 20,204 -3 20,087 20,047 20,045 -2 1,094 1,093 1,094 +1
Douglas 4,357 4,359 4,360 +1 8,662 8,666 8,667 +1 218 219 219 0
Ferry 1,275 1,278 1,278 0 1,898 1,900 1,900 0 118 118 118 0
Franklin 4,968 4,967 4,977 +10 10,618 10,619 10,634 +15 226 227 227 0
Garfield 427 428 428 0 839 840 840 0 25 25 25 0
Grant 7,800 7,826 7,821 -5 17,385 17,429 17,431 +2 534 535 535 0
Grays Harbor 13,713 13,719 13,729 +10 13,444 13,449 13,457 +8 575 575 575 0
Island 16,888 16,888 16,895 +7 19,992 19,997 20,000 +3 814 814 814 0
Jefferson 10,641 10,642 10,650 +8 7,293 7,289 7,295 +6 465 466 466 0
King 505,243 505,836 506,194 +358 350,779 351,127 351,306 +179 18,906 18,936 18,952 +16
Kitsap 56,149 56,164 56,236 +72 57,712 57,693 57,775 +82 3,097 3,090 3,097 +7
Kittitas 6,106 6,125 6,125 0 9,541 9,567 9,567 0 275 277 277 0
Klickitat 3,919 3,919 3,919 0 4,766 4,767 4,767 0 265 265 265 0
Lewis 10,243 10,245 10,247 +2 20,838 20,842 20,851 +9 756 756 757 +1
Lincoln 1,850 1,850 1,850 0 3,685 3,686 3,686 0 100 100 100 0
Mason 11,787 11,788 11,797 +9 12,505 12,507 12,519 +12 681 682 680 -2
Okanogan 6,100 6,101 6,107 +6 9,451 9,450 9,460 +10 465 465 468 +3
Pacific 5,209 5,210 5,210 0 4,730 4,730 4,730 0 295 295 296 +1
Pend Oreille 2,561 2,567 2,567 0 3,364 3,366 3,368 +2 179 179 179 0
Pierce 144,957 145,199 145,431 +232 157,443 157,704 157,905 +201 7,230 7,241 7,255 +14
San Juan 5,872 5,872 5,872 0 3,661 3,660 3,660 0 320 321 320 -1
Skagit 23,195 23,266 23,250 -16 27,135 27,224 27,219 -5 1,260 1,267 1,264 -3
Skamania 2,232 2,232 2,233 +1 2,522 2,522 2,525 +3 178 178 178 0
Snohomish 138,939 139,070 139,189 +119 145,423 145,553 145,628 +75 6,842 6,852 6,861 +9
Spokane 90,452 90,573 90,581 +8 105,435 105,569 105,584 +15 3,872 3,878 3,881 +3
Stevens 6,992 6,992 6,992 0 12,293 12,293 12,295 +2 566 566 566 0
Thurston 58,953 58,955 58,970 +15 49,409 49,413 49,426 +13 2,574 2,575 2,575 0
Wahkiakum 993 993 993 0 1,099 1,100 1,099 -1 61 61 61 0
Walla Walla 7,947 8,006 8,008 +2 14,240 14,277 14,290 +13 376 381 378 -3
Whatcom 44,053 44,056 44,072 +16 41,978 41,978 42,000 +22 2,177 2,177 2,179 +2
Whitman 7,724 7.715 7,722 +7 9,367 9,363 9,365 +2 458 457 457 0
Yakima 24,735 24,735 24,755 +20 46,044 46,044 46,079 +35 1,351 1,351 1,351 0
Totals 1,371,153
(48.86%)
1,372,442
(48.8702%)
1,373,361
(48.8730%)
+919 1,371,414
(48.87%)
1,372,484
(48.8717%)
1,373,232
(48.8685%)
+748 63,346
(2.25%)
63,416
(2.2581%)
63,465
(2.2585%)
+49
Sources:
1"Initial results". Washington Secretary of State. Retrieved 2008-08-07.
2 "First Recount Results". Washington Secretary of State. Retrieved 2008-08-07.
3 "Second Recount Results". Washington Secretary of State. Retrieved 2008-08-07.

Further legal challenges

Republican leaders in Washington claimed there were enough disputed votes to change the outcome of the election and filed a lawsuit in Chelan County Superior Court in order to avoid having the case heard in the more liberal Western Washington counties.[22] King County's election department (the greater Seattle area) was also targeted for how they handled the ballots, including untracked use of a "ballot-on-demand" printing machine. Also, ballots in six counties were discovered after the initial count and included in the recounts, the most being from King County. The judge hearing the lawsuit ruled that the Party did not provide enough evidence that the disputed votes were ineligible votes, or for whom they were cast, to enable the court to overturn the election.

Controversy over the election's outcome continued after the certification of the hand recount results. The Washington State Republican Party called into question the discrepancy between the list of voters casting ballots in King County (895,660) and the number of ballots reported in the final hand recount (899,199). They claimed that hundreds of votes, including votes by felons,[23] deceased voters,[24] and double voters,[24] were included in the canvass. As an explanation, election officials claimed that they had yet to finalize the list at the time, and argued that discrepancies in the two numbers are common and do not necessarily indicate fraud. As the election officials had expected, once the two lists were completed on January 5, the two numbers were indeed very close to one another. Also on January 5, 2005, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer published an article investigating votes in King County apparently cast by dead people.[25] The PI uncovered eight cases of votes attributed to dead people; these included one administrative error, two ballots cast by the spouses of recently deceased voters (one who voted against Gregoire), one case of a husband apparently voting his dead wife's ballot instead of his own, and a man who legally voted his absentee ballot and then died before election day. One dead woman was marked as having voted in person at the polls.[25]

By law, the result of the election can be contested by any individual who files suit at any time up to 10 days after any inauguration, thereby making January 22 the latest date to have filed any suit. Two private citizens filed challenges to the election on January 6: Daniel P. Stevens of Fall City and Arthur Coday Jr. of Shoreline. The Republican party filed a suit on January 7 in Chelan County claiming that voters had been deprived of their right to a "free and fair election", and demanding a revote by special election. While the evidence focused especially on problems in King County, adjacent Chelan was chosen as the venue because it was more solidly Republican and the GOP questioned the ability of King County judges to rule impartially in such a case.[26]

Neither suit asked for Gregoire's inauguration to be delayed, allowing governor Gary Locke to leave his post as scheduled.[26] Gregoire was inaugurated on January 12. On February 4, Judge John E. Bridges, assigned by Chelan County to preside over the case, ruled that the court did not have the authority to order a re-election.[27] However, in the same ruling, he also rejected the Democrats' argument that only the state legislature, which then had a Democratic majority, and not the court, had the sole authority to decide whether an election was invalid, thereby indicating that he intended to proceed to trial.[27] Both sides declared victory over this early pre-trial ruling.[27]

The Republicans presented data showing discrepancies in absentee ballot counts from 11 King County precincts. In some precincts, the county tallied more mail-in ballots than there were voters recorded as having voted by mail. In others, the opposite occurred—the county recorded more voters than ballots. The proof that ballots were fabricated for Democrats, Republican attorneys argued, is that four of the five precincts with the most excess mail-in ballots backed Gregoire. And as proof that ballots were misplaced or destroyed to harm Republicans, they pointed to the fact that four of the six precincts in which the most mail-in votes cannot be accounted for backed Republican Dino Rossi.

Additionally, the Republicans contended that King County was three days past its federally mandated due date of October 10 to send out its absentee ballots to overseas military personnel, widely considered more likely to vote Republican. The United States Postal Service Bulk Permit #1455 was used to mail 1,605 ballots on October 2, and 28,000 on October 13. The Republicans claimed that the delay may have prevented military service people from voting, thereby skewing the results in King County. On air, local talk radio host Bryan Suits claimed that his vote in particular was not counted while he performed military service in Iraq.

On February 19 Judge Bridges denied the Democratic motion calling for the challengers' burden of proof to include a comprehensive list of disputed ballots cast for each candidate. The Republicans acknowledged that such an exhaustive list would be impossible to complete, but continued to argue that the volume of illegal ballots, and the electoral tendencies of the counties in which they were cast, demonstrated a strong likelihood that the illegal ballots had led to Gregoire's victory. On February 26, as a part of the Republican suit, Rossi's legal team produced a list of 1,135 felons, deceased people, or people who allegedly voted twice, whom attorneys claimed influenced the outcome. A substantial number of the felon-voters were convicted as juveniles and were legally permitted to vote.[28] Conservative columnists suggested that felons were more likely to vote for Gregoire. Most of the felon-voters resided in counties won by Rossi.

As a solution to the problem of the illegal voters, the Republicans proposed a solution of "proportional reduction". Republicans claimed that it should be assumed that illegal votes were cast in the same percentages as other votes in the same precinct. For example, in a precinct where Gregoire won 60% of the vote, it would have been assumed that she received 60% of the illegal vote as well, and those votes would be subtracted from her total for the precinct. The Democrats countered that the Republicans' proposal was statistically invalid, an example of the ecological fallacy, and the best solution would be to call each of the felons into court and ask them to swear under oath which political candidate they voted for, after which time their vote would be removed from the total.[29]

The trial began on May 23, with both sides presenting their evidence of manipulation. On June 6, 2005, Judge John E. Bridges ruled that the Republican party did not provide enough evidence that the disputed votes were ineligible -or for whom they were cast- to overturn the election.[30] Judge Bridges noted that there was evidence that 1,678 votes had been illegally cast throughout the state,[31] but found that the only evidence submitted to show how those votes had been cast were sworn statements from four felons that they had voted for Rossi.[31] He stated that the judiciary should exercise restraint; "unless an election is clearly invalid, when the people have spoken, their verdict should not be disturbed by the court."[32] Nullifying the election, Bridges said, would be "the ultimate act of judicial egotism and judicial activism." He also concluded that according to his interpretation of the Washington Administrative Code, "voters who improperly cast provisional ballots should not be disenfranchised." He also rejected all claims of fraud and the Republican Party's statistical analysis, concluding that the expert testimony of the Republican party was "not helpful" and that the proportional reduction theory was not supported under any law in the state. Striking another blow against Rossi's court case, he stated that "the court is more inclined to believe that Gregoire would have prevailed under statistical analysis theory", rejecting the Rossi campaign's claim that improperly cast ballots led to Gregoire's victory.[30]

Bridges did accept the claim that some people voted illegally in the election, but said there was little proof of which candidate benefited from those votes. He ruled that 1,678 illegal votes should be subtracted from the total number of votes cast.[32] Bridges also removed five votes from the final count for two of the candidates: four for Rossi and one for Ruth Bennett.[33] No evidence was brought before the court of any of the illegal votes benefitted Gregoire.[33] The final margin of victory for Gregoire over Rossi was 133 votes.[34] Rossi did not appeal to the state Supreme Court[35] and the Washington State Republican party settled the case after paying $15,000 in court costs to the Democrats.[36]

Judge Bridges' ruling was seen as a comprehensive defeat for Rossi. The judge admitted nearly every piece of evidence the Republican Party offered and then wrote a thorough, tough opinion rejecting the Republicans' claims (while criticizing the administration of the election, particularly in King County); Rossi was left with very little legal ground for a successful appeal. After receiving such a negative verdict, Rossi declined to appeal to the State Supreme Court, claiming that the political makeup of the Court would make it impossible for him to win, thereby ending all legal challenges to the election of Gregoire as the Governor of Washington.[32]

Candidates

Debates

  • Complete video of debate, October 13, 2004 - C-SPAN
  • Complete video of debate, October 17, 2004 - C-SPAN

Results

2004 Washington gubernatorial election[37]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Christine Gregoire 1,373,361 48.873
Republican Dino Rossi 1,373,228 48.868
Libertarian Ruth Bennett 63,464 2.259
Total votes 2,810,053 100%
Democratic hold

Aftermath

The 2004 election became a focus of media attention again in early 2007 when news broke that eight federal prosecutors including John McKay, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Washington, had been fired. Republicans had hoped that after the election McKay would begin a federal investigation into alleged voter fraud, but he did not; McKay stated afterward that he would not convene a grand jury for purely political reasons and emphasized he had not seen any evidence of voter fraud in the Governor's race.[38]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Key:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear

References

  1. ^ . SeattleWeekly.com. Archived from the original on May 25, 2006. Retrieved June 23, 2006.
  2. ^ . Washington State Secretary of State Office. Archived from the original on September 7, 2006. Retrieved June 23, 2006.
  3. ^ "Top-Two Primary Litigation". Washington State Secretary of State Office. Retrieved June 23, 2006.
  4. ^ Gilmore, Susan (July 16, 2005). "Judge tosses state's new primary". The Seattle Times. Retrieved June 23, 2006.
  5. ^ La Corte, Rachel (July 21, 2005). "This year's primary unaffected by appeal". The Seattle Times. Retrieved June 23, 2006.
  6. ^ . The Stranger. Archived from the original on 2008-08-20.
  7. ^ Galloway, Angela (October 21, 2004). "Candidates for governor far apart on health-care issue". Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
  8. ^ Connelly, Joel (October 11, 2004). "In The Northwest: National GOP campaign against Gregoire slow to start". Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
  9. ^ "The Final Predictions". Sabato's Crystal Ball. Retrieved May 2, 2021.
  10. ^ "2004 SurveyUSA Election Polls". SurveyUSA. 2004-11-01. Retrieved 2022-06-22.
  11. ^ a b c Ammons, David (2004-10-29). "Polls show Democrats ahead". The News Tribune. Tacoma, Washington. Associated Press. p. 18. Retrieved 2022-06-22 – via Newspapers.com.
  12. ^ a b c d Kenneth P. Vogel (December 8, 2004). "Election mess heads to court". The News Tribune. Retrieved August 11, 2008.[permanent dead link]
  13. ^ "Another recount looms as Rossi certified". USA Today. Associated Press. November 30, 2004. Retrieved October 2, 2016.
  14. ^ a b c Andrew Garber (December 3, 2004). . The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on July 24, 2008. Retrieved August 10, 2008.
  15. ^ Washington State Democratic Central Committee v. Secretary of State Sam Reed, et al. (Washington State Supreme Court 2004).Text
  16. ^ . The Seattle Times. December 14, 2004. Archived from the original on June 19, 2008. Retrieved August 11, 2008.
  17. ^ a b Keith Ervin (December 17, 2004). "Up to 162 ballots missing". The Seattle Times. Retrieved August 10, 2008.
  18. ^ a b Susan Gilmore (December 23, 2004). . The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on February 11, 2007. Retrieved August 11, 2008.
  19. ^ Sam Reed (December 23, 2004). "Standards in place for a fair recount". The Seattle Times. Retrieved August 11, 2008.
  20. ^ Elaine Thompson (December 23, 2004). "Democrat wins hand recount in Wash. governor race". The Associated Press. Archived from the original on February 5, 2013. Retrieved August 6, 2008.
  21. ^ Ralph Thomas (December 30, 2004). "Gregoire declared governor-elect, but Rossi wants new vote". The Seattle Times. Retrieved August 6, 2008.
  22. ^ Sanders, Eli (January 8, 2005). "Washington Lawsuit Disputes Results of Race for Governor". The New York Times. Retrieved February 26, 2009.
  23. ^ David Postman (January 29, 2005). "Republicans say they've found 249 more felons who voted". The Seattle Times. Retrieved August 6, 2008.
  24. ^ a b David Postman (January 27, 2005). "GOP says it found 300 illegal votes". The Seattle Times. Retrieved August 6, 2008.
  25. ^ a b Le, Phuong Cat; Nicolosi, Michelle (January 7, 2005). "Dead voted in governor's race". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved August 7, 2008.
  26. ^ a b Postman, David; Gilmore, Susan; Ervin, Keith (January 7, 2005). . The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on June 16, 2008. Retrieved August 7, 2008.
  27. ^ a b c Kamb, Lewis (February 5, 2005). "Judge: No revote in governor dispute". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved August 7, 2008.
  28. ^ Postman, David (March 17, 2005). . The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on December 1, 2008. Retrieved August 7, 2008.
  29. ^ Christopher Adolph (May 12, 2005). "Report on the 2004 Washington Gubernatorial Election". Expert witness report to the Chelan County Superior Court in Borders et al v. King County et al.
  30. ^ a b Sharon Altaras (June 6, 2005). "Judge upholds Gregoire's election". Wenatchee World. Retrieved August 7, 2008.[permanent dead link]
  31. ^ a b Sharon Altaras (June 7, 2005). "Dems ecstatic, judge back to business as usual". Wenatchee World. Retrieved August 7, 2008.[permanent dead link]
  32. ^ a b c Postman, David (June 6, 2005). . The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on July 6, 2008. Retrieved August 7, 2008.
  33. ^ a b Postman, David (June 6, 2005). . The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on August 4, 2008. Retrieved August 7, 2008.
  34. ^ Amy Argetsinger (June 7, 2005). "Judge Upholds Win For Wash. Governor". The Washington Post. Retrieved August 6, 2008.
  35. ^ "Rossi won't take fight any further: Future could hold challenge". Associated Press. June 7, 2005. Retrieved August 7, 2008.[permanent dead link]
  36. ^ "GOP pays $15,000 to Democrats for court costs: Settlement negotiated in governor election dispute". Wenatchee World. Associated Press. June 28, 2005. Retrieved August 7, 2008.
  37. ^ November 2004 General (Report).
  38. ^ Bowermaster, David (March 13, 2007). . Seattle Times. Archived from the original on March 16, 2007. Retrieved March 19, 2007.

External links

  • . Accessed January 20, 2005.
  • The Seattle Times: Politics

Candidates' websites (Archived)

Washington government

2004, washington, gubernatorial, election, related, races, 2004, united, states, gubernatorial, elections, held, november, 2004, race, gained, national, attention, legal, twists, extremely, close, finish, among, closest, political, races, united, states, elect. For related races see 2004 United States gubernatorial elections The 2004 Washington gubernatorial election was held on November 2 2004 The race gained national attention for its legal twists and extremely close finish among the closest political races in United States election history Republican Dino Rossi was declared the winner in the initial automated count and again in a subsequent automated recount but after a second recount done by hand Democrat Christine Gregoire took the lead by a margin of 129 votes 2004 Washington gubernatorial election 2000 November 2 2004 2008 Nominee Christine Gregoire Dino RossiParty Democratic RepublicanPopular vote 1 373 361 1 373 228Percentage 48 873 48 868 County resultsGregoire 40 50 50 60 Rossi 40 50 50 60 60 70 Governor before electionGary LockeDemocratic Elected Governor Christine GregoireDemocraticAlthough Gregoire was sworn in as governor of Washington on January 12 2005 Rossi did not formally concede and called for a re vote over concerns about the integrity of the election The Republican Party filed a lawsuit in Chelan County Superior Court contesting the election but the trial judge ruled against it citing lack of evidence of deliberate electoral sabotage 1 Rossi chose not to appeal to the Washington State Supreme Court formally conceding the election on June 6 2005 Contents 1 Primary elections 1 1 Democratic primary 1 2 Republican primary 1 3 Libertarian primary 2 General election 2 1 Campaign 2 2 Predictions 2 3 Polling 2 4 Initial results 2 5 Manual recount 2 6 Discovered ballots 2 7 Final results 2 7 1 Results of recounts 2 8 Further legal challenges 2 9 Candidates 2 10 Debates 2 11 Results 3 Aftermath 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksPrimary elections EditThe 2004 election cycle was the first in Washington to use a party line ballot system of holding primary elections The state had a long tradition of using blanket primaries where the candidates of all political parties appear together on the same ballot for all voters In this system the leading vote getter from each party advances to the general election Washington s voters are not registered by party affiliation and a voter could participate in selecting candidates for more than one party although the voter could only choose one candidate of whatever party for each office In February 2004 the United States Supreme Court declined to review a lower court decision striking down the blanket primary as unconstitutional based on it violating the rights of the parties to freedom of association under the First Amendment Washington was thus forced to devise a new primary election system The state legislature passed a bill providing that the top two vote getters for each office in the primary would advance to the general election regardless of which political party they belonged to Voters would still be allowed to vote for any candidate as before However this measure was vetoed by Governor Gary Locke in favor of a Montana style system that requires voters to choose a ballot for one specific party and vote only on that party s candidates in the primary The primary election in 2004 was held using the new system but a campaign to replace it was already underway The Washington State Grange which had helped institute the blanket primary in 1935 filed Initiative 872 to implement the top two primary instead which would once again allow voters to cross party lines in the primary election but now send the top two vote getters to the general election In districts dominated by one party the top two system could result in Democrat or Republican only general election races Supporters claimed it would bring back voter choice across party lines and allow independent voters to participate in the primary opponents said it would exclude third parties and independent candidates from general election ballots and would in fact reduce general election voter choice The initiative was put to a public vote in November 2004 and passed with 60 of the vote 2 The state Republican Democratic and Libertarian parties sued 3 however and a federal district court judge ruled in 2005 that the measure was unconstitutional because it too infringed the parties First Amendment right to select their own candidates 4 Washington continued with the party line primary system while appealing the case 5 Democratic primary Edit In July 2003 incumbent governor Gary Locke indicated that he would not seek a third term opening up the Democratic primary to alternate candidates Former Washington State Supreme Court justice Phil Talmadge was the first candidate to enter the race for the Democratic primary challenging Gary Locke before he announced his retirement but Washington Attorney General Christine Gregoire quickly became the frontrunner leading in fundraising and endorsements King County Executive Ron Sims announced his candidacy but failed to garner much interest According to a March 2004 Mellman Group poll Gregoire would beat both Sims and Talmadge 36 to 11 and four percent in an open primary and would beat Sims 55 to 17 in a closed primary 6 On April 29 2004 Talmadge announced he was withdrawing from the race following the discovery of a benign kidney tumor citing the likely need for surgery and associated recovery time Candidate Home city Total votes PercentageChristine Gregoire Auburn 504 018 65 62 Ron Sims Seattle 228 306 29 72 Mike The Mover Lynnwood 15 118 1 96 Don Hansler Spanaway 8 636 1 12 Scott Headland Tacoma 6 983 0 90 Eugen Buculei Bellevue 5 005 0 65 Republican primary Edit The Washington State Republican Party struggled to find a candidate through most of 2003 when presumed candidate Bob Herbold a former Executive Vice President and COO of Microsoft declined to run They finally recruited Dino Rossi a relatively obscure political figure who left the state Senate to pursue a gubernatorial run due to state elected officials being prohibited from raising money while the legislature is in session Candidate Home city Total votes PercentageDino Rossi Sammamish 444 337 85 14 Bill Meyer Bellingham 44 448 8 51 John W Aiken Jr Medical Lake 33 104 6 34 Libertarian primary Edit The Libertarian Party of Washington State race was between Ruth Bennett former state chair of the party in Washington and Colorado and Michael Nelson Candidate Home city Total votes PercentageRuth Bennett Seattle 7 382 56 48 Michael Nelson Seattle 5 687 43 51 General election EditCampaign Edit Both Gregoire and Rossi ran as centrists and promised to change the political landscape in Washington and both made job and economic growth the centerpiece of their campaigns The Rossi campaign presented its own job growth plan and stated that 20 years of Democratic governors were to blame for the economic troubles in the state However during the general election he was criticized for a strongly conservative voting record that was at odds with his moderate campaign posture Rossi was also criticized for his long time professional association with a real estate broker convicted of fraud and for alleged resume embellishments Rossi had worked against Roe v Wade attacked opponents for supporting gay rights and proclaimed that creationism should be taught in public schools Rossi campaigned on being anti abortion and in favor of state and federal Constitutional Amendments that would ban certain benefits for gay couples He downplayed his long history of conservative comments and claimed to be a fiscal moderate with a social conscience Rossi would not publicly state his opinion over stem cell research The Gregoire campaign promised to boost job growth in the state which had slowed greatly after the dot com bubble burst in 2000 to improve education and to increase access to health care It also focused on Gregoire s record of challenging big tobacco and pharmaceutical companies in her tenure as state Attorney General Gregoire also proposed a major state led initiative in life sciences especially stem cell research where she proposed investing US 500 million of a tobacco settlement the state hoped to receive in 2008 Her economic plan for the state focused on improving state infrastructure and improving the quality of education in the state which she claimed would attract investors Gregoire also stated that she believed Washington residents should be allowed to buy prescription medicine from Canada while Rossi said that he needed to be convinced it was safe 7 Gregoire was criticized for being a part of the state government establishment but tried to counter Rossi s time for a change message by saying that she would blow past the bureaucracy and bring change herself This language surprised and disappointed many of her colleagues and supporters who saw it as a failure to give mention or credit to the efforts and achievements of past Democratic governors Gregoire was also strongly criticized in many attack ads for an incident which occurred in 2000 when Gregoire s office failed to file documents on time to appeal a record 17 8 million personal injury verdict against Washington Documents from an independent investigation conducted at the time of the incident show that Gregoire s deputies attempted to influence who was listed as responsible for the missed deadline A further case Gregoire was strongly criticized for occurred in 2002 during a wrongful death lawsuit when Gregoire s office did not detect an error in jury instructions The state was forced to pay 22 4 million to the plaintiff While Gregoire was not directly responsible for these offenses the Rossi campaign claimed that she had already cost Washington taxpayers millions of dollars and was negligent Rossi won the endorsement of the Republican Party the National Rifle Association The Seattle Times several business and medical associations and former governor Dan Evans Gregoire received the endorsement of the Democratic Party GLAAD the Seattle Post Intelligencer abortion rights organizations and all the previous Democratic governors of the state However the Republican Party decided not to fund ads for Rossi in the state as polls leading up to the election date showed Gregoire with a clear lead 8 Almost all of Rossi s ads were paid for and created by outside sources although as Gregoire s lead narrowed closer to the election date the Republican Party ultimately decided to launch a series of advertisements for Rossi Ruth Bennett s campaign focused on permitting same sex marriage in the state and economic liberalization in line with the political philosophy of libertarianism She also recommended equally dividing the state budget among the counties and allowing the counties to establish tax systems on a county by county basis ultimately leading to a diminished role of Washington s Department of Revenue Gregoire led in almost all polls conducted leading up to the election but Rossi was able to close in on her late in the race and won considerable support from Eastern Washington He also ran much stronger than expected in Snohomish and Pierce Counties Gregoire received strong support nearly a three to two margin from the largest county in the state King County which includes heavily Democratic Seattle During the initial ballot count the lead changed hands several times 2004 gubernatorial election county map of Washington Map does not show population or percentile Won by Rossi Won by Gregoire Predictions Edit Source Ranking As ofSabato s Crystal Ball 9 Lean R flip November 1 2004Polling Edit Pollster Date s administered Samplesize a Marginof error ChristineGregoire D DinoRossi R Other Undecided ReferenceSurveyUSA October 29 31 2004 620 LV 4 0 45 51 4 10 Strategic Vision October 24 27 2004 801 LV 3 0 47 42 11 11 Mason Dixon October 25 26 2004 800 RV 3 5 48 43 9 11 Elway Poll October 14 16 2004 405 RV 5 0 45 38 17 11 Initial results Edit Washington is unusual for a U S state in that it only requires that an absentee ballot be postmarked by the day of the election to be valid while most other states require the ballot to have arrived at the election office by that time Due to this as well as the state s high number of absentee ballots more than 60 of all King County voters voted absentee the initial result of the election was not known until November 17 the last day under state law for election results to be certified by each county s election officials The initial result as reported by Secretary of State Sam Reed showed Rossi with a lead of 261 votes well within the margin for an automatic machine recount pursuant to Washington state law less than 0 5 and less than 2 000 votes After a statewide recount completed on November 24 Rossi again came away with the lead this time by 42 votes 12 Manual recount Edit After Rossi was certified as the victor on November 29 the Washington State Secretary of State said that a manual recount was almost a certainty This view was shared by the Gregoire campaign with campaign spokesman Morton Brilliant saying that if all the ballots aren t counted we will go through the next four years with one candidate s supporters not believing the winner was legitimately elected and that it was worth taking three weeks to have four years of legitimacy and that s what is at stake 13 In Washington a candidate may request one hand count or machine count provided that they pay for the estimated cost of the recount up front 14 If a manual recount overturns the outcome of an election the state will then refund the money to the candidate 14 On December 3 the Washington State Democratic Party gave a 730 000 check to the Secretary of State for the statewide manual recount of nearly 3 million ballots 14 The Secretary of State issued the order for a recount on Monday December 6 The next day attorneys for the Democratic Party and the Secretary of State argued before the Washington State Supreme Court over terms for the recount 12 The Democrats argued for a universal standard to be applied to the manual recount and for the retabulation of votes over simply recanvassing them 12 Attorneys for the Secretary of State replied saying that any retabulation of votes would be a violation of state election laws and the Washington State Constitution 12 Two days later the Supreme Court issued their opinion and rejected universal standards in the statewide recount 15 Discovered ballots Edit King County Council Chairman Larry Phillips was at a Democratic Party office in Seattle on Sunday December 12 reviewing a list of voters whose absentee votes had been rejected due to signature problems when to his surprise he found his own name listed Phillips said he was certain he had filled out and signed his ballot correctly and asked the county election officials to investigate the discrepancy They discovered that Phillips signature had somehow failed to be scanned into the election computer system after he submitted his request for an absentee ballot Election workers claimed that they had received Phillips absentee ballot in the mail but they could not find his signature in the computer system to compare to the one on the ballot envelope so they mistakenly rejected the ballot instead of following the standard procedure of checking it against the signature of Phillips physical voter registration card that was on file The discovery prompted King County Director of Elections Dean Logan to order his staff to search the computers to see if any other ballots had been incorrectly rejected Logan announced on December 13 that 561 absentee ballots in the county had been wrongly rejected due to an administrative error 16 The next day workers retrieving voting machines from precinct storage found an additional 12 ballots bringing the total to 572 newly discovered ballots Logan admitted the lost ballots were an oversight on the part of his department and insisted that the found ballots be counted On December 15 the King County Canvassing Board voted 2 1 in favor of counting the discovered ballots Upon examination of the discovered ballots it was further discovered that with the exception of two ballots none of the ballots had been cast by voters whose surnames began with the letters A B or C 17 There was a further search for more ballots and on December 17 county workers discovered a tray in a warehouse with an additional 162 previously uncounted ballots 17 All together 723 uncounted or improperly rejected ballots were discovered in King County during the manual hand recount Chairman of the Washington State Republican Party Chris Vance stated that he was absolutely convinced that King County is trying to steal this election The National Rifle Association which had endorsed Rossi sent a mass e mail on December 14 to its members asking for volunteers to go to King County in order to sit in on the county elections office and observe the recount The Washington State Republican Party filed a restraining order in Pierce County District Court requesting an injunction against King County to block the tabulation of the uncounted ballots 18 The request was granted on December 17 but Democrats appealed to the Supreme Court On December 22 the court ruled against the Republican Party and overturned the restraining order allowing King County to count all ballots 18 The next day Sam Reed issued a statement explaining the process for certification of the uncounted ballots and the standards for fair voting practices in the state 19 After all other counties submitted their recount votes it was revealed on December 20 that at least five other counties besides King County had included ballots that had been discovered after the initial count For example Snohomish County included 224 missed ballots that had been discovered underneath mail trays The outcome of the State Supreme Court hearing regarding King County s votes could have potentially affected those counties counts as well Final results Edit The state Democratic party claimed on December 21 that the result of the manual recount including King County s votes placed Gregoire ahead by eight votes across the state Later on December 22 the preliminary recount results put Gregoire at a ten vote lead Washington state law allows for election officials to evaluate voter intent and correct ballots so that the machines can properly read them For example on a Scantron or other optical ballot an election official might fill in a circle that was not properly marked so that the machine may record the vote Republicans filed a federal lawsuit to stop the visual examination of ballots claiming that it is not allowed under federal law Equal Protection clause of the 14th Amendment The Republican Party was contending that the method King County was using was different from that of other counties therefore treating voters in King County differently from those in others However the court ruled that this was not the case as King County was counting their ballots in a manner similar to that of other counties A Pierce County Superior Court judge ruled that ballots should not be counted but on December 22 the Supreme Court ruled unanimously that counties explicitly have the ability to correct ballot consideration errors made during earlier counts Of those 732 ballots 566 were accepted as having valid signatures and were added to the existing total on December 23 The final results of the hand count as of December 23 20 had Christine Gregoire ahead by 130 votes which was later revised to 129 when it was discovered that Thurston County had added a vote after certification had been completed 21 Since the recount results were in favor of the party requesting the recount the Democrats were reimbursed the recount costs they had advanced to the state The Republicans were already preparing for further legal action before the final tally was announced by canvassing Republican voters whose ballots had been rejected On December 29 Rossi called for a re vote saying that this election has been a total mess and that a revote would be the best solution for the people of our state and would give us a legitimate governorship This solution had been rejected by the Democrats and Republican Secretary of State Sam Reed because Washington s election law contains no re vote provision which left a lawsuit the only other option Reed officially certified the results of the manual recount on December 30 declaring Gregoire the governor elect Results of recounts Edit County Christine Gregoire D Dino Rossi R Ruth Bennett L Initialresult1 Machinerecount2 Manualrecount3 Gain loss Initialresult1 Machinerecount2 Manualrecount3 Gain loss Initialresult1 Machinerecount2 Manualrecount3 Gain lossAdams 1 517 1 529 1 529 0 3 459 3 486 3 481 5 79 81 81 0Asotin 3 524 3 525 3 530 5 4 905 4 904 4 914 10 193 193 193 0Benton 19 830 19 831 19 834 3 44 888 44 890 44 895 5 1 119 1 118 1 118 0Chelan 10 074 10 077 10 077 0 18 436 18 437 18 438 1 523 523 523 0Clallam 16 225 16 226 16 230 4 18 831 18 832 18 836 4 919 919 920 1Clark 72 797 72 800 72 828 28 85 887 85 894 85 924 30 4 123 4 123 4 123 0Columbia 670 671 671 0 1 370 1 370 1 371 1 37 37 37 0Cowlitz 20 236 20 207 20 204 3 20 087 20 047 20 045 2 1 094 1 093 1 094 1Douglas 4 357 4 359 4 360 1 8 662 8 666 8 667 1 218 219 219 0Ferry 1 275 1 278 1 278 0 1 898 1 900 1 900 0 118 118 118 0Franklin 4 968 4 967 4 977 10 10 618 10 619 10 634 15 226 227 227 0Garfield 427 428 428 0 839 840 840 0 25 25 25 0Grant 7 800 7 826 7 821 5 17 385 17 429 17 431 2 534 535 535 0Grays Harbor 13 713 13 719 13 729 10 13 444 13 449 13 457 8 575 575 575 0Island 16 888 16 888 16 895 7 19 992 19 997 20 000 3 814 814 814 0Jefferson 10 641 10 642 10 650 8 7 293 7 289 7 295 6 465 466 466 0King 505 243 505 836 506 194 358 350 779 351 127 351 306 179 18 906 18 936 18 952 16Kitsap 56 149 56 164 56 236 72 57 712 57 693 57 775 82 3 097 3 090 3 097 7Kittitas 6 106 6 125 6 125 0 9 541 9 567 9 567 0 275 277 277 0Klickitat 3 919 3 919 3 919 0 4 766 4 767 4 767 0 265 265 265 0Lewis 10 243 10 245 10 247 2 20 838 20 842 20 851 9 756 756 757 1Lincoln 1 850 1 850 1 850 0 3 685 3 686 3 686 0 100 100 100 0Mason 11 787 11 788 11 797 9 12 505 12 507 12 519 12 681 682 680 2Okanogan 6 100 6 101 6 107 6 9 451 9 450 9 460 10 465 465 468 3Pacific 5 209 5 210 5 210 0 4 730 4 730 4 730 0 295 295 296 1Pend Oreille 2 561 2 567 2 567 0 3 364 3 366 3 368 2 179 179 179 0Pierce 144 957 145 199 145 431 232 157 443 157 704 157 905 201 7 230 7 241 7 255 14San Juan 5 872 5 872 5 872 0 3 661 3 660 3 660 0 320 321 320 1Skagit 23 195 23 266 23 250 16 27 135 27 224 27 219 5 1 260 1 267 1 264 3Skamania 2 232 2 232 2 233 1 2 522 2 522 2 525 3 178 178 178 0Snohomish 138 939 139 070 139 189 119 145 423 145 553 145 628 75 6 842 6 852 6 861 9Spokane 90 452 90 573 90 581 8 105 435 105 569 105 584 15 3 872 3 878 3 881 3Stevens 6 992 6 992 6 992 0 12 293 12 293 12 295 2 566 566 566 0Thurston 58 953 58 955 58 970 15 49 409 49 413 49 426 13 2 574 2 575 2 575 0Wahkiakum 993 993 993 0 1 099 1 100 1 099 1 61 61 61 0Walla Walla 7 947 8 006 8 008 2 14 240 14 277 14 290 13 376 381 378 3Whatcom 44 053 44 056 44 072 16 41 978 41 978 42 000 22 2 177 2 177 2 179 2Whitman 7 724 7 715 7 722 7 9 367 9 363 9 365 2 458 457 457 0Yakima 24 735 24 735 24 755 20 46 044 46 044 46 079 35 1 351 1 351 1 351 0Totals 1 371 153 48 86 1 372 442 48 8702 1 373 361 48 8730 919 1 371 414 48 87 1 372 484 48 8717 1 373 232 48 8685 748 63 346 2 25 63 416 2 2581 63 465 2 2585 49Sources 1 Initial results Washington Secretary of State Retrieved 2008 08 07 2 First Recount Results Washington Secretary of State Retrieved 2008 08 07 3 Second Recount Results Washington Secretary of State Retrieved 2008 08 07 Further legal challenges Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Republican leaders in Washington claimed there were enough disputed votes to change the outcome of the election and filed a lawsuit in Chelan County Superior Court in order to avoid having the case heard in the more liberal Western Washington counties 22 King County s election department the greater Seattle area was also targeted for how they handled the ballots including untracked use of a ballot on demand printing machine Also ballots in six counties were discovered after the initial count and included in the recounts the most being from King County The judge hearing the lawsuit ruled that the Party did not provide enough evidence that the disputed votes were ineligible votes or for whom they were cast to enable the court to overturn the election Controversy over the election s outcome continued after the certification of the hand recount results The Washington State Republican Party called into question the discrepancy between the list of voters casting ballots in King County 895 660 and the number of ballots reported in the final hand recount 899 199 They claimed that hundreds of votes including votes by felons 23 deceased voters 24 and double voters 24 were included in the canvass As an explanation election officials claimed that they had yet to finalize the list at the time and argued that discrepancies in the two numbers are common and do not necessarily indicate fraud As the election officials had expected once the two lists were completed on January 5 the two numbers were indeed very close to one another Also on January 5 2005 the Seattle Post Intelligencer published an article investigating votes in King County apparently cast by dead people 25 The PI uncovered eight cases of votes attributed to dead people these included one administrative error two ballots cast by the spouses of recently deceased voters one who voted against Gregoire one case of a husband apparently voting his dead wife s ballot instead of his own and a man who legally voted his absentee ballot and then died before election day One dead woman was marked as having voted in person at the polls 25 By law the result of the election can be contested by any individual who files suit at any time up to 10 days after any inauguration thereby making January 22 the latest date to have filed any suit Two private citizens filed challenges to the election on January 6 Daniel P Stevens of Fall City and Arthur Coday Jr of Shoreline The Republican party filed a suit on January 7 in Chelan County claiming that voters had been deprived of their right to a free and fair election and demanding a revote by special election While the evidence focused especially on problems in King County adjacent Chelan was chosen as the venue because it was more solidly Republican and the GOP questioned the ability of King County judges to rule impartially in such a case 26 Neither suit asked for Gregoire s inauguration to be delayed allowing governor Gary Locke to leave his post as scheduled 26 Gregoire was inaugurated on January 12 On February 4 Judge John E Bridges assigned by Chelan County to preside over the case ruled that the court did not have the authority to order a re election 27 However in the same ruling he also rejected the Democrats argument that only the state legislature which then had a Democratic majority and not the court had the sole authority to decide whether an election was invalid thereby indicating that he intended to proceed to trial 27 Both sides declared victory over this early pre trial ruling 27 The Republicans presented data showing discrepancies in absentee ballot counts from 11 King County precincts In some precincts the county tallied more mail in ballots than there were voters recorded as having voted by mail In others the opposite occurred the county recorded more voters than ballots The proof that ballots were fabricated for Democrats Republican attorneys argued is that four of the five precincts with the most excess mail in ballots backed Gregoire And as proof that ballots were misplaced or destroyed to harm Republicans they pointed to the fact that four of the six precincts in which the most mail in votes cannot be accounted for backed Republican Dino Rossi Additionally the Republicans contended that King County was three days past its federally mandated due date of October 10 to send out its absentee ballots to overseas military personnel widely considered more likely to vote Republican The United States Postal Service Bulk Permit 1455 was used to mail 1 605 ballots on October 2 and 28 000 on October 13 The Republicans claimed that the delay may have prevented military service people from voting thereby skewing the results in King County On air local talk radio host Bryan Suits claimed that his vote in particular was not counted while he performed military service in Iraq On February 19 Judge Bridges denied the Democratic motion calling for the challengers burden of proof to include a comprehensive list of disputed ballots cast for each candidate The Republicans acknowledged that such an exhaustive list would be impossible to complete but continued to argue that the volume of illegal ballots and the electoral tendencies of the counties in which they were cast demonstrated a strong likelihood that the illegal ballots had led to Gregoire s victory On February 26 as a part of the Republican suit Rossi s legal team produced a list of 1 135 felons deceased people or people who allegedly voted twice whom attorneys claimed influenced the outcome A substantial number of the felon voters were convicted as juveniles and were legally permitted to vote 28 Conservative columnists suggested that felons were more likely to vote for Gregoire Most of the felon voters resided in counties won by Rossi As a solution to the problem of the illegal voters the Republicans proposed a solution of proportional reduction Republicans claimed that it should be assumed that illegal votes were cast in the same percentages as other votes in the same precinct For example in a precinct where Gregoire won 60 of the vote it would have been assumed that she received 60 of the illegal vote as well and those votes would be subtracted from her total for the precinct The Democrats countered that the Republicans proposal was statistically invalid an example of the ecological fallacy and the best solution would be to call each of the felons into court and ask them to swear under oath which political candidate they voted for after which time their vote would be removed from the total 29 The trial began on May 23 with both sides presenting their evidence of manipulation On June 6 2005 Judge John E Bridges ruled that the Republican party did not provide enough evidence that the disputed votes were ineligible or for whom they were cast to overturn the election 30 Judge Bridges noted that there was evidence that 1 678 votes had been illegally cast throughout the state 31 but found that the only evidence submitted to show how those votes had been cast were sworn statements from four felons that they had voted for Rossi 31 He stated that the judiciary should exercise restraint unless an election is clearly invalid when the people have spoken their verdict should not be disturbed by the court 32 Nullifying the election Bridges said would be the ultimate act of judicial egotism and judicial activism He also concluded that according to his interpretation of the Washington Administrative Code voters who improperly cast provisional ballots should not be disenfranchised He also rejected all claims of fraud and the Republican Party s statistical analysis concluding that the expert testimony of the Republican party was not helpful and that the proportional reduction theory was not supported under any law in the state Striking another blow against Rossi s court case he stated that the court is more inclined to believe that Gregoire would have prevailed under statistical analysis theory rejecting the Rossi campaign s claim that improperly cast ballots led to Gregoire s victory 30 Bridges did accept the claim that some people voted illegally in the election but said there was little proof of which candidate benefited from those votes He ruled that 1 678 illegal votes should be subtracted from the total number of votes cast 32 Bridges also removed five votes from the final count for two of the candidates four for Rossi and one for Ruth Bennett 33 No evidence was brought before the court of any of the illegal votes benefitted Gregoire 33 The final margin of victory for Gregoire over Rossi was 133 votes 34 Rossi did not appeal to the state Supreme Court 35 and the Washington State Republican party settled the case after paying 15 000 in court costs to the Democrats 36 Judge Bridges ruling was seen as a comprehensive defeat for Rossi The judge admitted nearly every piece of evidence the Republican Party offered and then wrote a thorough tough opinion rejecting the Republicans claims while criticizing the administration of the election particularly in King County Rossi was left with very little legal ground for a successful appeal After receiving such a negative verdict Rossi declined to appeal to the State Supreme Court claiming that the political makeup of the Court would make it impossible for him to win thereby ending all legal challenges to the election of Gregoire as the Governor of Washington 32 Candidates Edit Christine Gregoire D Attorney General of Washington Dino Rossi R state senator Ruth Bennett L chair of the Libertarian Party of WashingtonDebates Edit Complete video of debate October 13 2004 C SPAN Complete video of debate October 17 2004 C SPANResults Edit 2004 Washington gubernatorial election 37 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Christine Gregoire 1 373 361 48 873Republican Dino Rossi 1 373 228 48 868Libertarian Ruth Bennett 63 464 2 259Total votes 2 810 053 100 Democratic holdAftermath EditThe 2004 election became a focus of media attention again in early 2007 when news broke that eight federal prosecutors including John McKay U S Attorney for the Western District of Washington had been fired Republicans had hoped that after the election McKay would begin a federal investigation into alleged voter fraud but he did not McKay stated afterward that he would not convene a grand jury for purely political reasons and emphasized he had not seen any evidence of voter fraud in the Governor s race 38 See also EditList of close election results 2004 United States presidential election in Washington state 2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Washington 2004 United States Senate election in WashingtonNotes Edit Key A all adultsRV registered votersLV likely votersV unclearReferences Edit Borders et al v King County et al SeattleWeekly com Archived from the original on May 25 2006 Retrieved June 23 2006 Elections for partisan offices Washington State Secretary of State Office Archived from the original on September 7 2006 Retrieved June 23 2006 Top Two Primary Litigation Washington State Secretary of State Office Retrieved June 23 2006 Gilmore Susan July 16 2005 Judge tosses state s new primary The Seattle Times Retrieved June 23 2006 La Corte Rachel July 21 2005 This year s primary unaffected by appeal The Seattle Times Retrieved June 23 2006 The Stranger The Stranger Archived from the original on 2008 08 20 Galloway Angela October 21 2004 Candidates for governor far apart on health care issue Seattle Post Intelligencer Connelly Joel October 11 2004 In The Northwest National GOP campaign against Gregoire slow to start Seattle Post Intelligencer The Final Predictions Sabato s Crystal Ball Retrieved May 2 2021 2004 SurveyUSA Election Polls SurveyUSA 2004 11 01 Retrieved 2022 06 22 a b c Ammons David 2004 10 29 Polls show Democrats ahead The News Tribune Tacoma Washington Associated Press p 18 Retrieved 2022 06 22 via Newspapers com a b c d Kenneth P Vogel December 8 2004 Election mess heads to court The News Tribune Retrieved August 11 2008 permanent dead link Another recount looms as Rossi certified USA Today Associated Press November 30 2004 Retrieved October 2 2016 a b c Andrew Garber December 3 2004 Democrats will finance a statewide hand recount The Seattle Times Archived from the original on July 24 2008 Retrieved August 10 2008 Washington State Democratic Central Committee v Secretary of State Sam Reed et al Washington State Supreme Court 2004 Text List of rejected King County ballots The Seattle Times December 14 2004 Archived from the original on June 19 2008 Retrieved August 11 2008 a b Keith Ervin December 17 2004 Up to 162 ballots missing The Seattle Times Retrieved August 10 2008 a b Susan Gilmore December 23 2004 Focus turns to canvassing board The Seattle Times Archived from the original on February 11 2007 Retrieved August 11 2008 Sam Reed December 23 2004 Standards in place for a fair recount The Seattle Times Retrieved August 11 2008 Elaine Thompson December 23 2004 Democrat wins hand recount in Wash governor race The Associated Press Archived from the original on February 5 2013 Retrieved August 6 2008 Ralph Thomas December 30 2004 Gregoire declared governor elect but Rossi wants new vote The Seattle Times Retrieved August 6 2008 Sanders Eli January 8 2005 Washington Lawsuit Disputes Results of Race for Governor The New York Times Retrieved February 26 2009 David Postman January 29 2005 Republicans say they ve found 249 more felons who voted The Seattle Times Retrieved August 6 2008 a b David Postman January 27 2005 GOP says it found 300 illegal votes The Seattle Times Retrieved August 6 2008 a b Le Phuong Cat Nicolosi Michelle January 7 2005 Dead voted in governor s race Seattle Post Intelligencer Retrieved August 7 2008 a b Postman David Gilmore Susan Ervin Keith January 7 2005 GOP suit doesn t ask to prevent swearing in The Seattle Times Archived from the original on June 16 2008 Retrieved August 7 2008 a b c Kamb Lewis February 5 2005 Judge No revote in governor dispute Seattle Post Intelligencer Retrieved August 7 2008 Postman David March 17 2005 GOP s felon list may be way off The Seattle Times Archived from the original on December 1 2008 Retrieved August 7 2008 Christopher Adolph May 12 2005 Report on the 2004 Washington Gubernatorial Election Expert witness report to the Chelan County Superior Court in Borders et al v King County et al a b Sharon Altaras June 6 2005 Judge upholds Gregoire s election Wenatchee World Retrieved August 7 2008 permanent dead link a b Sharon Altaras June 7 2005 Dems ecstatic judge back to business as usual Wenatchee World Retrieved August 7 2008 permanent dead link a b c Postman David June 6 2005 Rossi will not appeal election ruling The Seattle Times Archived from the original on July 6 2008 Retrieved August 7 2008 a b Postman David June 6 2005 Election trial dispatches The Seattle Times Archived from the original on August 4 2008 Retrieved August 7 2008 Amy Argetsinger June 7 2005 Judge Upholds Win For Wash Governor The Washington Post Retrieved August 6 2008 Rossi won t take fight any further Future could hold challenge Associated Press June 7 2005 Retrieved August 7 2008 permanent dead link GOP pays 15 000 to Democrats for court costs Settlement negotiated in governor election dispute Wenatchee World Associated Press June 28 2005 Retrieved August 7 2008 November 2004 General Report Bowermaster David March 13 2007 McKay stunned by report on Bush Seattle Times Archived from the original on March 16 2007 Retrieved March 19 2007 External links EditRecount status from the Secretary of State s website Accessed January 20 2005 The Seattle Post Intelligencer Elections The Seattle Times Politics Tacoma News Tribune Election 2004Candidates websites Archived Christine Gregoire Dino Rossi Ruth BennettWashington government Washington Secretary of State Chelan County Superior Court Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2004 Washington gubernatorial election amp oldid 1129777266, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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