Bush v. Gore : the fight for Florida's vote
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Bibliographic Information
Bush v. Gore : the fight for Florida's vote
Kluwer Law International, c2001
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Note
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
On Tuesday, November 7, 2000, 100 million Americans went to the polls to elect a new president. By early the next morning it was clear Florida would determine the election. For without the state, neither candidate had the 270 Electoral College votes needed to claim the White House. Within days, attorneys for Texas Governor George W. Bush, the Republican Party's nominee, and Vice President Albert A. Gore, Jr, the Democratic Party's nominee, were battling each other in courtrooms stretching from Miami to Tallahassee. By the time the skirmishing ended five weeks later, dozens of lawsuits had been filed and an astonishing array of state and federal judges had weighed in on the dispute by issuing a series of ground-breaking opinions. In recognition of the worldwide significance of the 2000 United States presidential election, Kluwer Law International commissioned three Florida law professors to gather together the key judicial rulings generated by this remarkable test of participatory democracy.
The editors have chosen the top 31 opinions, including the Palm Beach County "butterfly ballot" case, the Florida Supreme Court's "let the count continue" decision, and the United States Supreme Court's infamous December 9th stay order, which effectively ended Al Gore's quest to become president.
by "Nielsen BookData"