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Poll: US voters skeptical of elections Memories of Florida's contested 2000 presidential
election and a growing number of pre-election lawsuits are making Americans
skeptical about a voting process they once took for granted. Six in 10 of those surveyed in an Associated Press poll say it's likely there will not be a clear winner in the presidential race by Nov. 3 — the day after the election. About half say they fear the results will be challenged in court, according to the poll conducted for the AP by Ipsos Public Affairs.
A majority say they are confident the vote count in their own state will be accurate. Fewer than half of Democrats say they are "very confident" their state's vote count will be accurate, while three-fourths of Republicans feel that way. Lori McKay, 29, a Republican from St. Louis, says she thinks election officials will get things right this time. "After all the problems last time, I'm thinking they will do a better job," she said. In the closing days of the campaign, the national parties are keeping especially close tabs on Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Iowa and New Mexico, all presidential battleground states where a challenge to a close race might be lodged Nov. 3. Florida in 2000 turned into a political and legal ground zero over a Bush-Gore recount. After 36 days, the U.S. Supreme Court (news - web sites) handed Bush a 537-vote victory in Florida and, thus, the presidency. More than half in the poll, 54 percent, say they think the vote count in Florida was not fair and accurate, with Republicans overwhelmingly saying it was and Democrats overwhelmingly saying it was not. Independents say by a 2-to-1 margin that it was not fair. Pamela Martin, a 52-year-old Democrat from Miami, says she was "not too confident" that 2004 will be any better in Florida than the last time around. Martin, who is black, says she heard plenty of stories about blacks who had trouble voting the last time. Worries about politics and legal challenges far outweigh worries about terrorist attacks intended to disrupt the elections, the poll found. Just under one-third of those polled say they expect terrorists will attempt to disrupt elections. Elections officials in many states are taking steps to improve security at polling places but are looking for ways to heighten readiness without posting armed police.
Almost half in the poll say having armed police at the polls would make them more inclined to vote, while about one in six say it would make them less inclined. Minority voters were more likely than whites to say armed police would make them less inclined to vote. The AP-Ipsos poll of 1,000 adults, including 856 registered voters and 670 likely voters, was taken Oct. 22-24 and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points for the full sample, slightly larger for subgroups like registered voters. |
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