Two days ago nobody in New Hampshire's Sutton County had voted for
Republican candidate Ron Paul. Then in the live broadcast of CSPAN's
Campaign 2008 a caller tells [
video] that he personally knows people in Sutton County who have voted for Paul. On Ron Paul Forums a
post
reads: 'I am from Sutton originally and my parents and one aunt all
voted for Ron Paul today and Sutton says 0. So this is wrong. This is a
town that had 20 people counting the ballots and I have no reason to
believe that they cheated. Small town and I was born and raised there.
The real numbers will come in by morning. The electronic machines in
the big towns are the ones we have to worry about."'
Bev Harris, the single most important activist in the United States on the issue of votefraud
contacted
Jennifer Call, the head clerk in Sutton County, 'who was forced to
admit that the 31 votes Ron Paul received were completely omitted from
the final report sheet, claiming "human error" was responsible for the
mistake'. Harris is part of the PBS
documentary Hacking Democracy.
On Obama's slip and Hillary's surge
Brad Friedman, one of the most persistant online reporters writing indepth stories about the American voting process,
notes:
'As we know, the presumption is always that the polls were wrong. Never
the results'. 'I'm not sure why Obama would have conceded so soon,
given the virtually inexplicable turn of events in New Hampshire
tonight. What's going on here? Before proceeding, I recommend you read
the third section of
the post I just ran
an hour or so ago, concerning the way the ballots are counted in New
Hampshire, largely on Diebold optical-scan voting systems, wholly
controlled and programmed by a very very bad company named LHS
Associates. [...] the pre-election pollster's numbers (NOTE: that's not
Exit Polls, but Pre-Election Polls!) were dead-on, for the most part,
on the Republican side, as well as on the Democratic side. Except in
the do-or-die (for Hillary) Clinton v. Obama race. [...]'.
Republican presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani, the self acclaimed hero of 9/11,
scores in three New Hampshire towns 9.11% of the votes.
* Campton - 604 votes
VOTE COUNT METHOD: Hand Counted Paper Ballots
- Giuliani = 55 votes = 9.11%
* Hampton - 3,141 votes
VOTE COUNT METHOD: Diebold Accuvote optical scan ; contractor: LHS Associates/John Silvestro
- Giuliani = 286 votes = 9.11%
* Sandwich - 395 votes
VOTE COUNT METHOD: Hand Counted Paper Ballots
- Giuliani = 36 votes = 9.11%
This coincidence is reminiscent of other coincidences with voting totals in the past. From
part 12 of
the DeepJournal series on electronic voting: 'When they checked the
official voting results themselves, they also discovered that in each
of the three-part elections exactly 141,000 votes were cast. For the
race for the Senate it was the same thing: in the three election
phases, 122,000 votes were cast every time - a statistical
impossibility that was repeated again recently. At the elections for
the Municipal Council of Comal, Texas in 2002, three Republican
candidates received exactly
18,181 votes
each. 'Look at that. That's weird', said one of the candidates. In
Louisiana in 1995, a candidate happened to receive exactly
33% of the votes in each district.
[...] The first investigation into tampering with voting machines started in 1970,
writes the daughter of James Collier. James Collier is the man who, together with his brother Kenneth, published the
book Votescam:
The Stealing of America . Kenneth Collier joined the race for governor
of the State of Florida, but on the evening of the results there was
bad news about the computer that was to count the votes. The computer
had broken down, and up until that time one trusted the polls. Collier
appeared to be able to count on thirty percent of the votes, but when
the votes were finally counted, he had only 15 percent. The brothers
Collier discovered that this pattern had repeated itself for decades.'
New Hampshire is a crucial state in the American voting process. One of the two Senators
representing New Hampshire is the Republican
John Sununu. His father is
John H. Sununu,
the former Govenor of New Hampshire. He was also the White House Chief
of Staff for the previous president Bush. He got this position
following his involvement in the voting process in New Hampshire in
1988. Was there a connection?
Part nine of the DeepJournal series on electronic voting: 'In chapter
23
of George Bush - The Unauthorized Biography, Webster Tarpley writes
about the previous president Bush: 'Bush also extended largesse to
those who had assisted him in the [1988] election campaign just
concluded. At the top of this list was Governor John Sununu of New
Hampshire, who would have qualified as the modern Nostradamus for his
exact prediction of Bush's 9% margin of victory over Dole in the New
Hampshire primary --unless he had helped to arrange it with vote
fraud.' 'The Sununu machine deliverd exactly as promised, securing the
governor the post of White House chief of staff',
writes Tarpley.
[...] we now have modems installed in a goodly number of voting
machines. People have observed voting machine company employees
re-booting a voting machine by merely dialing a number on a cell phone.
[...] There is a story in the book "
Votescam,"
by James and Kenneth Collier, relating how George H. W. Bush, during
the 1988 Presidential Primary season, lost to Bob Dole in the Iowa
caucuses and was behind 8 percentage points in the New Hampshire
Primary in the week before the voting. He made a telephone call to
computer expert and Governor
John [Sununu],
and - lo and behold - when the polls closed on primary night the
pollsters were dumbfounded. Bush won by 9 percentage points',
writes Online Journal.'
There is more on New Hampshire in
part nine:
'In New Hampshire in 1988, candidate Pat Robertson ended up with the
lowest vote tally. Just two weeks prior to a subsequent primary in
heavily-Christian South Carolina, the Jimmy Swaggart sex scandal broke
out. Jimmy Swaggart was a fellow TV-evangelist of Robertson's, and the
public still had libertine TV-evangelist Jim Bakker on their
minds.
'Talking to reporters, Robertson pointed to "the evidence that two
weeks before the primary... it suddenly comes to light." Robertson
added that the Bush campaign was prone to "sleazy" tricks, and
suggested that his own last-place finish in New Hampshire was "quite
possibly" the result of "dirty tricks" by the Bush campaign.'
In 1980 George H. W. Bush battled Reagan for the candidacy of the Republican Party. From
part 12 of the DeepJournal series on electronic voting: '
The late William Loeb, publisher of
The Union Leader wrote:
'The Bush operation in Iowa had all the smell of a CIA covert
operation....Strange aspects of the Iowa operation [included] a long,
slow count and then the computers broke down at a very convenient
point, with Bush having a six per cent bulge over Reagan'. Later Bush
helped Reagan win the precidency and win himself the vice-presidency
with the October Surprise: Iran promised Bush to hold the Americans in
Tehran hostage some time longer, making sure president Carter lost the
elections to Reagan and Bush; Iran would receive millions in cash and
the opportunity to buy weapons. Read more about this operation in an
article I wrote about this deal between Bush and Iran.
John Kerry lost to George W. Bush in 2004. At least, according to official history. From
part 12
of the DeepJournal series on electronic voting: 'By Tuesday afternoon,
November the 2nd, it was clear for anyone that followed the polls
closely: Kerry would become the new president of the United States.
Bush's operatives
informed him that he was three percent behind. Stock exchange watchers noticed how Wall Street was already
reacting to the coming change of power. Steve Coll, managing editor of The Washington Post
writes
the day after the elections that the polls were clearly pointing to
Kerry as the winner and that he (Coll) had to scramble when the
official outcome was different. [...] Fox-tv commentator and poll
expert
Dick Morris carefully explains in an
article
ow reliable polls are these days. Then he expresses his disbelief
concerning the failure of predicting the correct election results of no
less than six states. He writes: 'It invites speculation that more than
honest error was at play here.' In his conclusion he writes: 'This was
no mere mistake. Exit polls cannot be as wrong across the board as they
were on election night. I suspect foul play'. The pollsters are under
fire, but the question is whether this is appropriate. Possibly there
is nothing wrong with the polls, but with the official outcome.
[...] Associate Professor of English
Michael Keefer notices
a 'mathematical impossibility' as he compares the results of the
national exit polls and the number of respondents. This number had
hardly increased, but at the last moment an extra 5% voted for Bush.
Former Associate Professor of Mathematics David Anick of MIT has
calculated
'the odds of Bush making an average gain of 4.15 percent among all 16
states included in the media's 4 p.m. exit polling' at 1 in 50,000, or
.002 percent. Steven Freeman, a specialist in research methods who
received his Ph.D. at MIT, made an
analysis
[PDF] of the discrepancies between the exit polls and the official
polls. In his summary he writes that it is not his goal to demonstrate
election fraud. He does write that the observed discrepancies in the
three 'swing states' cannot be explained by coincidence or mistakes.
It's not yet clear to him how this can happen. [...]'
From the intro to
part 14
of the DeepJournal series on electronic voting in the 2004 election:
'Scientific analysis shows a statistically unexplainable large gap
between the results of the American presidential elections and the exit
polls. 'Scientific Analysis Suggests Presidential Vote Counts May Have
Been Altered',
concludes US Counts Votes in reference to the
report
(PDF) 'Analysis of the 2004 Presidential Election Poll Discrepancies'.
The report was written by the National Election Data Archive Project,
consisting of a large number of competent professors.'
On the 2000 election, where Bush beat Gore, I wrote in the earlier parts of the series,
part 3:
''Now it's unofficial: Gore did win Florida' [headlines] The Guardian
[...] 'As George W. Bush handed further key government posts to
hardline Republican right-wingers, an unofficial recount of votes in
Florida appeared to confirm that Bush lost the US presidential
election.' In
part 5 on Gore/Bush I quote Eric Alterman from his
article
'Buried truth of a flawed election': '[...] it put the wrong man in the
White House'. Alterman writes further: ' 'As the Associated Press
report put it, “In the review of all the state's disputed ballots, Gore
edged ahead under all six scenarios for counting all undervotes and
overvotes statewide.” In other words, he got more votes than George
Bush'. Alterman concludes: 'No matter how you count it, if everyone who
legally voted in Florida had had a chance to see their vote matter, Al
Gore would be sitting in the Oval Office today.'