Your link doesn’t lead to anything, but if you are trying to suggest the supreme arbitrarily decided Bush won the presidency then that is factually incorrect. There was a court case about Florida’s ballots in particular that happened to be enough to decide the outcome of the presidential election.
sin_free_for_00_days@sopuli.xyz 1 year ago
The Supreme Court decided the election.
jasondj@ttrpg.network 1 year ago
More to the point, they stopped the recount.
Fredselfish@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Which in turn declared Bush the winner when clearly lost.
kersploosh@sh.itjust.works 1 year ago
Had the recount proceeded it was still close enough that either Bush or Gore could have won depending on which counties were recounted and how ballots were counted. Election post-mortems found that, had a limited recount proceeded as advocated by Gore’s lawyers, Bush would have won anyway.
Florida also had those crappy punch card ballots that didn’t always cleanly punch, and eventually started falling apart if they were handled too much. (Anyone remember all the fuss about “hanging chads” and “dimpled chads?”) Any recount result was going to be dubious.
The Supreme Court shouldn’t have intervened IMO, but they didn’t directly decide the election.
OptimusPhillip@lemmy.world 1 year ago
But they didn’t decide it directly and arbitrarily, as OP is suggesting might have happened. The power to elect the President is in the hands of the Electoral College, and the House of Representatives. The most that a Supreme Court can do is tamper with the process of tallying the popular vote.