Wilmington Star-News Editorial, 2/20/2005:
A sorry lesson from Mr. Fletcher
Bill Fletcher's chances of becoming North Carolina's next superintendent of public instruction are virtually nonexistent. An analysis of 11,310 disputed ballots confirms that.
Mr. Fletcher should concede and spare the state a costly, tedious and potentially destructive battle.
A Democrat who disputed the results of a much closer race for agriculture commissioner finally faced reality and conceded. He was behind by 2,287 votes.
Mr. Fletcher, a Republican, has even less chance of overturning the November results. He's behind by 8,535 votes.
He tried to erase that margin by arguing that 11,310 ballots should be thrown away because they'd been cast in the wrong precinct, presumably, by voters who'd moved or who were simply confused about where to vote.
Such ballots are set aside as "provisional," and boards of elections decide later whether to count them. Mr. Fletcher argued that none of them should be.