The Mercury News Weekend

Long odds for ‘Bush v. Gore, with a twist’

Short-handed court would have to rule if electorate undecided

- By Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON — What happens if America wakes up on Nov. 9 to another undecided, hotly disputed presidenti­al election? What if the outcome turns on the razor-thin margin in one or two states, one candidate seeking a recount, the other going to court?

Weknow what happened in 2000, when the Supreme Court in a 5-4 vote effectivel­y settled the election in favor of George W. Bush.

As controvers­ial as that decision was, it was made by a nine-justice court. This time around, there are only eight justices and the possibilit­y of a tie vote. That would leave a lower federal or state court ruling in place, with no definitive judgment from the nation’s highest court.

“It would be Bush v. Gore, with a twist,” said one election law expert, law professor Richard Hasen at the University of California at Irvine.

“I call it the nightmare scenario,” said University of Kentucky law professor Joshua Douglas.

Sixteen years ago, the court divided 5 to 4 about whether to get involved at all and then voted the same way to stop Florida’s state court-ordered recount. The five more conservati­ve justices sided with Republican nominee Bush, while the four more liberal justices would have ruled for Democrat Al Gore.

“A no-brainer!” Justice Anthony Kennedy said in Jan Crawford’s book “Supreme Conflict,” recalling the decision to take on the case. “A state court deciding a federal constituti­onal issue about the presidenti­al election? Of course you take the case.”

The odds of history repeating itself in Florida or elsewhere are long. But it’s hard to discount any possibilit­y, however remote, in a tight campaign that already has seen Democratic lawsuits charging voter suppressio­n and Republican claims the election will be rigged.

The reason a tie Supreme Court vote is even possible stems from another aspect of this unusual election year, the Senate Republican­s’ refusal to act on President Barack Obama’s nomination of Judge Merrick Garland to fill the seat of Justice Antonin Scalia, who died in February.

Any decision to seek a recount or otherwise con- test the election results would depend on the margin in any one state and its potential for affecting the national outcome. In 2000, neither Bush nor Gore could muster an Electoral College majority of 270 votes without Florida.

“For candidates who lose by a fraction of a percent, even up to 1.5 percent, they will at least explore their op- tions for seeking a recount or challengin­g the results in a particular state,” said Michael Morley, a law professor at Barry University in Orlando, Florida. Morley represente­d Republican Joe Miller in his postelecti­on challenge to Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, who won re-election as a write-in candidate after losing the GOP primary to Miller in 2010.

If an initial recount doesn’t settle things, a lawsuit could follow, with appeals possible all the way to the Supreme Court.

If a case should make it that far, it would reach a court made up of four justices appointed by Republican presidents and four by Democrats. Just four of the eight were on the court for Bush v. Gore, although Chief Justice John Roberts aided Bush’s cause as a lawyer in private practice.

At this point, it’s impossible to know who might go to court and in which state, what the issue might be and who might benefit if justices were evenly divided. A tie is a win for the person who already has prevailed in the lower court.

But for some who already are dismayed about the extended Supreme Court vacancy since Justice Scalia’s death, a tie would have broad implicatio­ns beyond the election.

“I worry about a 4-4 tie because it would undermine the court’s legitimacy,” Douglas said.

A suit challengin­g presidenti­al election results almost certainly would have to be wrapped up before Dec. 19, the date electors will meet.

“I worry abouta4-4tie because it would undermine the court’s legitimacy.” — Joshua Douglas, University of Kentucky lawprofess­or

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