If Florida's five-week recount after the 2000 presidential election
seemed endless, pity Puerto Rico. A recount is all but certain in the
race for governor here, after the Election Night tally gave Anibal
Acevedo Vilá, the candidate who favors keeping the island's
commonwealth status, a margin of just 3,880 votes. But the process will
not start until December, and come Christmas - even New Year's, some
predict - Puerto Ricans may still be guessing who their next governor
will be. Blame Puerto Rican election law, which requires an
"escrutinio," or review of vote summaries from each precinct, before an
official recount of the roughly two million paper ballots cast on Nov.
2. Hundreds of officials from the island's election commission and its
three major parties are submerged in that task, while Mr. Acevedo Vilá
forges ahead as the presumed victor and Pedro Rosselló, the
pro-statehood candidate, protests. The officials are also checking the
validity of about 30,000 ballots that did not make the initial count, a
slow process that sometimes involves determining voter intent. Mr.
Rosselló, a former two-term governor whom polls showed leading
throughout the race, sued in federal court last week, protesting Mr.
Acevedo Vilá's appointment of a transition team and demanding an
immediate recount. A hearing is scheduled for Thursday, but Mr. Acevedo
Vilá's confidence appears unshaken. His family toured the governor's
mansion on Monday, and his wife said her children were choosing
bedrooms. [more]
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