For Kerry, Concession Is 'the Talk of the Day'
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, Nov. 3, 2004
Electoral count: Bush has already won
WASHINGTON – President Bush edged closer to victory
Wednesday against Sen. John Kerry in a roiling contest that came
down to a heart-stopper in the heartland, a battle over Ohio.
Disheartened Kerry aides met to evaluate his options, with
concession the talk of the day.
Story Continues Below
Nothing was settled or conceded in the first light of day, but
Kerry faced a daunting task trying to deny Bush an electoral
majority that was almost within reach. The Democrat's campaign
planned a statement by midday, advisers said. Two of them, speaking
on condition of anonymity, said Kerry's concession seemed simply a
matter of time after one last look for uncounted ballots that might
close the 136,000-vote advantage Bush held in Ohio.
"We are convinced that President Bush has won re-election,"
said White House chief of staff Andy Card. But that conviction did
not sway Democrats, who insisted Kerry was still in contention for
Ohio's decisive cache of 20 electoral votes.
Bush himself planned to declare victory before long. Republican
Party Chairman Marc Racicot said the president put it off
temporarily as a courtesy to Kerry, "to allow the opportunity to
look at the situation in the cold hard light of day."
Before both sides retired for an hour or two of sleep, one top
Kerry adviser said the Democrat's chances of winning Ohio, and with
it the White House, were difficult at best.
Kerry's brain trust met first thing Wednesday and planned at
least one other session before taking their recommendation to the
senator, said several officials involved in the deliberations.
"We will fight for every vote," John Edwards, Kerry's running
mate, told supporters in Boston in the wee hours Wednesday. "We've
waited four years for this victory. We can wait one more night."
Continuity was the result elsewhere in government, with the GOP
padding its Senate majority, knocking out Minority Leader Sen.
Tom Daschle of South Dakota in the process, and easily hanging on
to the House. That will be the state of play on Capitol Hill for
the next two years, with the chance of a Supreme Court nomination
fight looming along with legislative battles.
Glitches galore cropped up in overwhelmed polling places as
Americans voted in high numbers, fired up by unprecedented
registration drives, the excruciatingly close contest and the sense
that these were unusually consequential times.
"The mood of the voter in this election is different than any
election I've ever seen," said Sangamon County, Ill., clerk Joseph
Aiello. "There's more passion. They seem to be very emotional.
They're asking lots of questions, double-checking things."
The country exposed its rifts on matters of great import in
Tuesday's voting. Exit polls found the electorate split down the
middle or very close to it on whether the nation is moving in the
right direction, on what to do in Iraq, on whom they trust with
their security.
The electoral map Wednesday looked much like it did before; the
question mark had moved and little else.
Bush built a solid foundation by hanging on to almost all the
battleground states he got last time. Facing the cruel arithmetic
of attrition, Kerry needed to do more than go one state better than
Al Gore four years ago; redistricting since then had left those
2000 Democrat prizes 10 electoral votes short of the total needed
to win the presidency.
Florida fell to Bush again, close but no argument about it.
And so all eyes turned to Ohio, where Democrats clung to hopes
that provisional ballots would overcome Bush's lead. With Bush
leading by 145,000 votes, one top Kerry adviser said the Democrat's
chances were tough.
Bush's relentless effort to wrest Pennsylvania from the
Democrat column fell short. He had visited the state 44 times,
more than any other. Kerry picked up New Hampshire in perhaps the
election's only turnover.
Christians Give Bush His Victory
In Ohio, Kerry won among young adults, but lost in every other
age group. One-fourth of Ohio voters identified themselves as
born-again Christians, and they backed Bush by a 3-to-1 margin.
A sideline issue in the national presidential campaign, gay
civil unions might have been a sleeper that hurt Kerry, who strongly
supports that right, in Ohio and elsewhere. Ohioans expanded their
law banning gay marriage, already considered the toughest in the
country, with an even broader constitutional amendment against
civil unions.
In all, voters in 11 states approved constitutional amendments
limiting marriage to one man and one woman.
For all the stumping in Ohio, nine in 10 voters had made up
their minds before the last week, and they favored Bush. True to
his reputation as a strong closer, Kerry performed better than Bush
among those who decided late.
In Florida, Kerry again won only among voters under age 30. Six
in 10 voters said Florida's economy was in good shape, and they
voted heavily for Bush. Voters also gave the edge to Bush's
handling of terrorism.
In Senate contests, Rep. John Thune's victory over Daschle
represented the first defeat of a Senate party leader in a
re-election race in more than a half century. Republicans were
assured of at least 53 seats in the coming Senate, two more than
now.
Republicans made gains in the House, too, where they had
prevailed for a decade.
The dispute in Ohio concerned provisional ballots, those cast
by people whose qualifications to vote were challenged or whose
names were missing from the voter rolls.
Nationwide, with 98 percent of the precincts reporting, 112
million people had voted, up from 105 million in 2000. Bush was
ahead in the popular vote, which he lost in 2000, and independent
Ralph Nader was proving to be much less of a factor this year than
four years ago.
Exit polls conducted for The Associated Press and the television
networks by Edison Media Research and Mitofsky International
suggested that slightly more voters trusted Bush to handle
terrorism than Kerry. A majority said the country was safer from
terrorism than in 2000, and they overwhelmingly backed Bush.
But many said things were going poorly in Iraq, and they heavily
favored Kerry. And with nearly 1 million jobs lost in Bush's term,
Kerry was favored by eight of 10 voters who listed the economy as a
top issue.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Editor's note:
Ann Coulter strikes back: How to Talk to a Liberal -- Get it FREE Click Here Now
Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
2004 Elections
George W. Bush
Sen John Kerry