If the same Diebold voting machines are used in the next presidential election, they will show Dubya has won (even though he can't run)
2006-07-16 08:19:21
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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No, Gore just plain lost.
Electoral votes come from who had the most personal votes.
Gore was just not as popular in Florida - what a surprise that the state that the President's brother is Governor in would vote for another Bush. Logic says if the like one Bush man, they would like another. Hey Gore invented the Internet - he should be fine.
2006-07-15 05:01:38
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answer #2
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answered by Wolfpacker 6
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If you mean electronic voting, Gore got 'beat' on paper ballots.
If you mean electoral voting, that's the electoral college and it can't be rigged since it's largely a formality based on results certified by each state's secretary of state.
If you are talking about Kerry in Ohio in 2004, you would be referring to Diebold voting machines with no paper trail and various other irregularities well documented on truthout.org
2006-07-15 01:30:31
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answer #3
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answered by Brand X 6
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What country?
In Mexico, the PRI had electoral fraud down to an art form from 1940 to about 1990.
2006-07-18 21:33:39
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answer #4
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answered by F. Frederick Skitty 7
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Yes, it can. Look at the examples which led to rioting in Serbia and some of the countries after the fall of the USSR.
2006-07-14 23:46:21
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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There sure was a big investigation in Florida.
Nothing was proved.
2006-07-15 03:07:27
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answer #6
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answered by cheeky chic 379 6
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