ELECTION2000 The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, December 5. 2000 -- 5 COURT Continued from Page 1 Bader-Ginsburg hinted at the possibility for the Court to remand the case to Florida's high court during oral arguments Friday. "I suppose there would be a possibility for this Court to remand for clarification," she told Gore lawyer Lawrence Tribe. The issue the Court was considering was whether the Florida Supreme should have extended the date for vote certification, which in effect allowed manual recounts to be included in the final vote tabulation. Bush's lead over Vice President Al Gore in Florida shrank from 930 to 537 once the manual counts were included. This decision comes only three days after the nation's highest court heard oral arguments in the case - _.unusually speedy action from an institution not known for its haste. Perhaps even more peculiar was the manner in which the Court released the opinion. Instead of announcing it in the courtroom and then passing out copies as is usually the case, the justices made no announcement and Court offi- cials handed out the opinion during oral argu- ments for another case yesterday morning. As soon as copies of the opinion were distrib- uted, members of the media attending the morn- ing's oral arguments bolted from the courtroom to make sense of what they had just been hand- ed.° The spin began almost directly after the Court ruled. Reactions were predictably partisan. "I'm not surprised by the decision in the Supreme Court given (Justice) Scalia's ques- tioning in the Court as to the basis for the Flori- da Supreme Court's decision " Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) said. Justice Antonin Scalia, known for his staunchly conservative views, is a favorite target of liberals. Levin said he felt the decision was anything but a defeat for Vice President Al Gore. "As a matter of fact, it implies that Scalia would support a dismissal of the Bush appeal if the basis of the Supreme Court of Florida's decision was that they are construing or inter- preting the Florida statutes," Levin said. If the Florida Supreme Court clarified their decision in this manner, "It would mean a Gore victory in the U.S. Supreme Court. Republican Rep. J.C. Watts of Oklahoma called on Gore to concede in light of the High Court's opinion. "Today's ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court, in favor of Texas Governor George W. Bush is a victory for the United States and the American people" Watts said in a press release on behalf of the House Republican Conference. °y "This ruling supports the common sense idea that a disputed election must be decided by laws- set forth before Election Day, not by changes proposed afterwards as Vice President Gore so desperately wished," he added.r Dinh said that after reading the opinion, he felt the Bush campaign had the most to celebrate.: "I think it is a three-quarters victory for the Bush campaign and half of that is because the Court has recognized this is a federal cases Dinh said. "I guess Al (bore can take some comfort in the fact that the Court did not issue an opinion that states categoricaly that the Bush argument was correct ... but I'm not sure that is much of Reporters gather on the steps of the Florida Supreme Court in Tallahassee in a comfort," he added. anticipation of the courts announcement yesterday. Fla. legislature ready to act, if TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) - The speaker of the Florida House is hinting the courts may make it unnecessary for the the Republican-controlled Lecis- lature to intervene in the disputed presidential elec- tion. A spokeswoman for House Speaker Tom Feeney says, "If there's no need for us, we're not going to step in.' She says, however, Feeney believes "there's still enough uncertainty" to warrant a special session. Lawmakers would likely choose electors for George W. Bush. Feeney has been a strong advocate of an immediate session to assure that Floridas six million votes count when the Electoral College selects a president on Dec. 18. The deadline for naming the slate of elec- tors is Dec. 12. The House speaker's hope for a quick session were dashed when Senate President John McKay decided to take several days to think about it. Both leaders must agree in order to call the session. Thie Republican-controlled legislature had poised itself to hold a special session tomorrow to try to enforce George W. Bush's certified victory in Florida by naming the state's 25 electors, the h ouse majority leader said. ELECTION Continued from Page 1 cession, Card said in an interview. Still, "I don't expect any announcements this week, at least Cabinet announcements," he added. "The Supreme Court ruling legit- imizes many of our concerns. It did point out or justify some of the angst we had expressed about the Florida Supreme Court ruling," Card said. Just three days after hearing his- toric arguments, the U.S. Supreme Court invited Florida's top court to clarify its reasons for extending the deadline for hand-counted ballots in some Democratic counties. A spokesman for the state high court said the justices would reply to the order. "This is sufficient reason for us to decline at this time to review the federal questions asserted to be present" in the contested election, the court said in its unsigned, unan- ittous opinion. "The judgment of the Supreme Court of Florida is therefore vacated " Florida's styen justices, all of whom were appointed by Democra- tic goxernois, had ordered Secre- tary of State Katherine Harris to accept recount totals for several days after the state's Nov. 14 dead- line. Bush appealed. but the Supreme Court did not rule on the merits of his filine. By passing the case back to Florida, the nation's highest court leaves in doubt gains made by (jore through manual recounts after Nov. *14. Those totals trimmed Bush's lead from 930 votes to 537 out of six million cast. In Florida, the state's House speaker, a Republican, prepared to approve a special session to choose presidential electors - presumably supporters of Bush. But the effort was moving slow ly and lawmakers still needed the consent of the cau- tious Senate president, Republican John McKay Bush's political operatives have signaled to McKay that they approve of his go-slow approach, 4fearing backlash from voters under an intense public relations cam- paign by Democrats. * Bush himself urged caution, elling reporters who asked about the legislative fight: "We ought to take this process one day at a time." A Washington Post-ABC News survey suggested that 56 percent of SAmericans want the Legislature to :avoid the unsettled presidential election. Equal numbers want Con- Oress to butt out, though the U.S. Constitution gives state and federal lawmakers a role in the Electoral College process. '(ore's team was organizing a campaign to discredit the Legisla- ture said the state's Republican governor, Bush brother Jeb Bush. Gore himself was briefed Sunday by his legal team about potential legal options to counter the Florida Legislature. (ore's lawyers argT~ue that the U.S. Constitution gives leg- islatures the power to select clec- rs but Congress sets the date for them to be picked. That date, they argue, was the Nov. 7 election; the Florida legislature established the rules for that election and now has no furtheir input on the selection of electors, Gore lawyers say. Officials familiar with the meet- 9th Circuit upholds U Washington admissions R UNG Continued from Page 1 paid at the University of Washington, he said. Monday's ruling cited the U.S. Supreme Court's 1978 Bakke v. University of California decision, in which the higuh court struck down the use of racial quotas in school admissions but allowed schools to consider race in deciding which students to accept. The ruling puts the 9th Circuit in direct con- Ilict with the 5th Circuit court, which includes Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi. In 1996, a three-judge panel of that court ruled in favor of four white students who sued the University of Texas, saying its law school did not admit them because of their r'ace. The ruling led to an injunction banning univei- sities from usimg race as a factor in admission policies. "We are well aware of the fact that much has happened since Bakke was handed down," said Judge Ferdinand F. Fernandez, writing for the three-judge panel of the 9th Circuit. "Since that time, the court has not looked upon race-based factors with much favor. Still, it has not returned to the area of univer- sity admissions," Fernandez said. Rosman said his clients haven't decided whether to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. They say that while the university's admis- sions policy may have been constitutional, it also may have been applied incorrectly. But David J. Burman, the university's lawyer, said the students do not have much of a case. "We're optimistic that, at some point, they'll choose to drop it," he said. A message was not immediately returned from the assistant attorney general's office in Seattle representing the University of' Wash- ington. VISIT THE DAILY ONLINE: WWW.MICHIGANDAIL YCOM