Will Cal. A.G. Race Settlement End Contested-Vote Epidemic?
Ending one of the starkest Hot-vs.-Not political campaigns of 2010, San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris has defeated Los Angeles D.A. Steve Cooley in the race for California attorney general.
The race -- one of many prominent contests around the United States whose outcomes remained in dispute long after Election Day -- made for a fluid and entertaining ballot count. Cooley declared victory on election day, then saw the count seesaw for weeks (with both sides trying to work the media) as California counties sent their bags of ballots to Sacramento [pdf].
Quite a few counties, including some large ones, have still not finished their recounts, and two contests for the U.S. House of Representatives remain undecided. In the 11th District, Republican David Harmer trails Democrat Jerry McNerney by 2,474 votes, with the candidates awaiting the final count from 16,982-vote Contra Costa County. In the 20th District, a bitter race between Democrat Jim Costa and Republican Andy Vidak has the Democrat ahead by 3,033, with Fresno County's 10,202 votes yet to be counted.
As noted here a few weeks ago, these two elections are good examples of the gerrymandering weirdness that may or may not be solved by California's new districting process.
Almost exactly ten years ago to the day, Reason's Nick Gillespie, in his true identity as Mr. Mxyzptlk, dilated on the Bush/Gore Very Special Election, arguing that the disputed vote was the summation of a gnat-straining trend in reporting that characterized the 1990s:
As a decade, the still unnamed 1990s were characterized by nothing so much as high-profile controversy after controversy in which either the basic facts themselves were called into question or apparent reality was refuted by nonstop "spin." Hence, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas's 1991 Senate confirmation hearings ultimately hinged on unproven (and perhaps unproveable) He Said/She Said charges every bit as unseemly as the contemporaneous Kevin Bacon movie that may have inspired the attack in the first place. Was the footage of L.A. cops beating the hell out of Rodney King an example of good police work, as the jury in the first trial, and an appalling number of regular citizens, concluded after defense attorneys broke it down for them frame by frame? Similarly, did the film of various rioters braining Reginald Denny in the mayhem that followed that verdict adequately identify the luckless trucker's assailants (juries split on this question)?
What to make of the "thermal imaging" shots from the government's assault on Waco — does the haunting infrared footage show anything conclusive, or is it simply a high-tech Rorschach test of an individual's attitude toward the government (and religious freaks)? Did L.A. cops monkey with evidence to frame O.J. Simpson for a crime he may have committed anyway? What to make of the impassioned pleas by the Juice's attorneys, Barry Scheck and Peter Neufield, that the seemingly incontrovertible DNA evidence — the stuff they routinely rely on to free innocent defendants in other situations — was useless crap in this case? Was the gun pointed at Elian Gonzalez, or just at Donato Dalrymple (who technically may not have been a fisherman)? Everything solid, it seemed, dissolved into air, during the decade.
It would be tempting to say that this Age of Uncertainty is still with us, but the big stories of the aughts have tended to contain non-negotiable facts: the 9/11 attacks, the absence of weapons of mass destruction, the first black president, and the credit unwind can all be debated as to importance, perpetrators or effects. But the basic events are pretty clear.
More on gerrymandering:
Update: Vidak has thrown in the towel. Harmer still refuses to concede, but apparently it is numerically impossible for him to win. Both the winners are incumbent Democrats, in regions that are broadly speaking about as Republican as California gets. As noted in the post linked above, the Republicans have nobody to blame but themselves, for accepting an incumbency-protection redistricting back in 2001, rather than trying to remain a competitive party. (Although Harmer might also blame American Independent Party candidate David Christensen, who took 5.2 percent of the vote on a platform of eliminating the 12th, 16th and 17th Amendments and repealing the Federal Reserve Act.)
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Welcome all to the god that failed.*
[*Democracy]
You know who else rejected your reality and substituted their own?
Libertarians
Jaime? Wait, no, it was Adam.
Adam Savage?
Curses!!
I beat you by what could have only been seconds, dude. Ha ha ha ha! Victory is mine!
What do I win?
I was going to say, "Just about everybody." But Adam Savage is a correct answer, too.
Don't think much of Harris but Cooley is a right bastard - only race I voted Democrat this year and for that matter in a couple of election cycles
The only person from the "Right" in California I really liked is Mark Carbonaro.
It makes me smile to know that Cooley lost, such a douchebag.
There has still been no plausible scenario in which gerrymandering can be used to the benefit of Party X over party Y.
What gerrymandering does effect is incumbent X benefits over challenger y...regardless of party.
One should also note close races, like the ones described above by Tim should be an indication of the lack of gerrymandering...not evidence of gerrymandering.
Also we never get a good in-depth view of a gerrymandered seat.
All we ever get is weird maps and a shadow of an explanation.
Gerrymandering is the most foreboding unexplained non-problem Reason.com covers.
Tell that to the Texas Democrats.
I believe Republicans were winning both those congressional seats after Election Day.
Talk about systematic fraud.
Thanks for linking the plot to that awesome Kevin Bacon movie!
The Bacon Bros. rock! BTW
Woah, I didn't realize there was a "Hot vs. Not" angle. Now that I've seen pics, all I can say is MOAR!!
What an embarrassing attempt to discern a Cultural Age where there is none. The 90s were Uncertainty, while the aughts are Not? One could easily make the opposite argument simply by choosing different evidence.
Even the evidence cited for certainty since 9/11 hardly makes the point:
"the 9/11 attacks, the absence of weapons of mass destruction, the first black president, and the credit unwind can all be debated as to importance, perpetrators or effects. But the basic events are pretty clear."
Clear? Who did 9/11 is still being debated by at least as many people as question OJ's guilt. Bush loyalists will insist that WMD WERE found (sarin gas!). And our first black president? His legitimacy is questioned by millions who believe he may not be a U.S. citizen at all. The "credit unwind"? People can't even agree on what to CALL the financial crisis, because choosing a name assigns blame. And most people have no idea what happened -- they know it affected them, but they couldn't even give you a broad sketch of who did what when.
This article is the kind of crap I laugh at when I read it in the legacy media. Reading it here, not so much. It's more of a cringe than a laugh.
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