GOP Backs Hand Recount in Texas Race

— -- As Republicans criticize Democrats for seeking manual recounts in four Florida counties, a bipartisan group of residents in Texas’ northeastern Smith County are set to begin counting ballots by hand, using a method endorsed in a 1997 law signed by Gov. George W. Bush.

ABCNEWS.com

Nov. 18 — As Texas Gov. George W. Bush’s campaign lambasted the hand recount in Florida, a Texas Republican is hoping a manual recount could help win him a seat in the State House of Representatives. And they’ll be checking chads.

A bipartisan group of residents in Texas’s northeastern Smith County will gather Monday to begin counting ballots by hand. But instead of relying on a machine count, the group will use a method endorsed in a 1997 law signed by Bush.

Republican candidate Bill Hollowell was defeated in Nov. 7’s election by incumbent Democratic Representative Bob Glaze of Gilmer.

In the first count, Glaze received 21,496 votes to Hollowell’s 19,416 — winning by 2,080 votes, according to the Secretary of State’s office.

On Monday, the Secretary of State approved Hollowell’s request for a recount in Texas House District 5, which includes Smith, Upshur and Van Zandt counties.

A committee of 12 registered voters, six Republicans and six Democrats chosen by a judge, will carry out the recount in Smith County. Each of the three counties will have its own bipartisan recounting committee. The recount must be completed in all three counties by Nov. 20, said Jane Dees, spokeswoman for the Secretary of State.

A Texas Voter’s True Intent

To determine voter’s true intent, Smith County ballot counters will hold some 11,000 punch cards to the light and stare through holes. They will inspect partly dislodged, dimpled, and so called “pregnant” chads. Ballot counting rooms in District 5 are likely to bear a striking resemblance to the images on television of vote counters examining punch cards in Broward County, Fla. — one of the four heavily democratic counties in which the Gore campaign is seeking a manual recount.

Unlike Florida, where ballot counting standards are at individual counties’ discretion, Texas has a statewide standard for manual counts. The rules for recounting ballots by hand are included in Texas’s 700-page Election Code and are similar to the standards currently being used in Broward County, Fla.

The recount standards, signed into law by Bush in 1997, state “a manual recount shall be conducted in preference to an electronic recount.”

Florida’s 25 Electoral College votes could determine this year’s presidential election. With unofficial numbers from Oregon and New Mexico, Gore currently leads Bush in the Electoral College tally 267 to 246, with only Florida undecided.

Texas Chads

The statute concerning manual recounts is in section 127:130 of the state Election Code, which says a vote must be counted if “at least two corners of the chad are detached” and “light is visible through the hole.”

It must also be counted if “an indentation on the chad from the stylus or other object is present and indicates a clearly ascertainable intent of the voter to vote” or the chad “reflects by other means a clearly ascertainable intent of the voter to vote.”

Former Secretary of State James A. Baker III, who is overseeing the Bush campaign’s recount monitoring efforts in Florida, defended the Texas manual recount provision last week by saying it is subject “to uniform rules and standards.”

By contrast, he said in Florida, “the manual vote count sought by the Gore campaign would not be more accurate than an automated count. … Human error, individual subjectivity and actions to ‘determine the voter intent,’ would replace precision machinery.”

The language in the Texas law was part of a 48-page elections bill signed by Bush that made more than 50 changes to the code, only a few of them dealing with recounts.

The law Bush signed in 1997 was never intended to eliminate or significantly reduce machine recounts of punch-card votes, according to an article in The Washington Post.

Apparently, it resulted from problems election officials faced in races involving three or more candidates.

Occasionally, two losing candidates would request a recount but could not agree on whether it should be hand or by machine.

Elections officials asked the Legislature for a solution. The 1997 law emerged from that, Melinda Nickless, assistant director of elections in the Texas Secretary of State’s office, told The Post.

ABCNEWS.com’s Claire Moore and The Associated Press contributed to ths report.