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Thursday
Dec092004
Thursday, December 9, 2004 at 11:59PM
With support from John Kerry's campaign, two third-party
candidates for president officially asked on Tuesday for a recount in
Ohio, the state that put President Bush over the top in November.
The requests, mailed to all 88 counties, were expected to arrive by
Wednesday. Generally, county election boards must agree to a recount,
as long as the parties bringing the challenge pay for it. And the Green
and Libertarian parties collected enough donations to cover the
required $113,600, or $10 per precinct. David Cobb, Green Party
presidential candidate, said the election was full of irregularities,
including uncounted provisional ballots. "There is a possibility that
George W. Bush did not win Ohio. If that is the case, it would be a
crime against democracy for George Bush to be sworn into office," he
said. Cobb got 186 votes in Ohio. Libertarian candidate Michael
Badnarik received 14,695, or 0.26 percent of the overall total. The
request came a day after Ohio officially certified Bush as the winner
of this battleground state by 118,775 votes. The president's unofficial
election-night margin of 136,000 votes shrank slightly after
provisional and absentee ballots were counted and errors corrected.
Bush won the presidency by taking Ohio's 20 electoral votes, bringing
his total to 286 over Kerry's 252. Kerry conceded the morning after the
election when presented with the state's results. [more] Scroll down for more.