USA TODAY International Edition

Our view: Florida recounts stir bad memories, baseless charges

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If there were a recurring nightmare for Democrats, it would probably involve repeatedly driving past a road sign that reads: “Welcome to Florida.”

As in 2000, the vote in the Sunshine State is painfully close, in this case for the marquee state offices of governor and senator. As in 2000, the state is in the middle of messy recounts. And, as in 2000, the Democrats are more likely than not to come up on the short end.

In the closer of the two races, termlimite­d Republican Gov. Rick Scott held a pre-recount lead of 12,562 votes in his bid to oust Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson. Only the discovery of a major voting machine error during the recount process could erase a lead of that magnitude.

But it has been Scott who has flown off the handle in the days since the election. As his election-night lead of nearly 57,000 began to shrink, he declared war on the election process in parts of the state that supported his opponent.

Scott accused Democrats of committing election fraud and demanded investigat­ions of vote counting in Palm Beach and Broward counties. He filed lawsuits that, among other things, demand voting machines be impounded and votes tabulated after last Saturday be tossed out. (Nelson has sued, as well, demanding that mail-in ballots postmarked before Election Day be counted.)

These unwarrante­d accusation­s — echoed and amplified by President Donald Trump — only undermine faith in democracy. The day that citizens see elections as something other than impartial exercises in vote counting is the day that despots gain a foothold.

To be sure, there are valid points to be made about the lack of transparen­cy and competency levels of certain county elections commission­ers. For Republican­s, just getting an estimate on how many ballots remain has been like pulling teeth. But there is no evidence of election fraud.

Florida's slowness in counting votes is hardly unique. A week after Election Day, key races in Arizona, California, Georgia, Maine, New York, Texas and Utah were yet to be called.

With the possible exception of Georgia — which has notoriousl­y harsh voting laws and a gubernator­ial candidate who, as secretary of state, oversaw his own apparent election — there are few legitimate grounds for complaint.

The slow and frustratin­g counts are easy to explain. Elections take place with outdated equipment and mostly volunteer workforces.

State government­s, moreover, have made matters worse by adding to the work load. In Republican-controlled states such as Florida, this means restrictiv­e laws that increase the number of provisiona­l ballots and complicate the process of validating them. In liberal California, it means laws requiring localities to bend over backward to make sure every valid ballot is counted.

The ongoing recount in Florida evokes 2000 and likely makes Democrats wince. Let's hope the spectacle doesn't become the beginning of something else — the end of Americans' faith in the sanctity of the ballot box.

 ?? HALI TAUXE/ TALLAHASSE­E DEMOCRAT/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Florida Gov. Rick Scott
HALI TAUXE/ TALLAHASSE­E DEMOCRAT/USA TODAY NETWORK Florida Gov. Rick Scott

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