By Raymond McCaffrey,
Washington Post, December 2, 2006
[link
to article]
An Anne Arundel County Democrat who narrowly lost a bid for the state
legislature announced yesterday that she was dropping a court challenge
of the November election results and had conceded to her Republican
opponent.
Barbara Samorajczyk, who lost to Ronald A. George by 53 votes in House
of Delegates District 30, said she conceded by phone yesterday after
deciding that "there wasn't any meaningful way to do a recount" with
electronic voting machines. "We cannot recount the machine," Samorajczyk
said.
On Monday, an appeal was filed in Anne Arundel Circuit Court on behalf
of Samorajczyk and Joan Cadden, a Democratic delegate who lost by 28
votes to Republican Del. Donald H. Dwyer Jr. in the District 31 House
contest in northern Anne Arundel. Samorajczyk said Cadden had joined her
in dropping the appeal, which challenged an Anne Arundel Board of
Elections decision to not count more than 200 provisional or absentee
ballots. "It just was such a difficult and procedurally consuming case,"
Samorajczyk said.
Cadden has not conceded and is planning to ask for a recount once the
State Board of Elections certifies the results, Samorajczyk said. Cadden
could not be reached yesterday.
Samorajczyk, a County Council member, led by 559 votes after Election
Day, before the counting of provisional and absentee ballots. She said
her defeat, in a district covering the Annapolis area, has led her to
question whether the state should use paper ballots that could be reviewed.
George said that Samorajczyk's call was "very gracious" and that he
supports finding a way for the electronic voting machines to generate "a
paper trail." George, owner of an Annapolis jewelry store, said he is
"anxious to move on." |