Ohoo boy - so we allow everyone to do whatever they want - and then wait for dispute or retally. This would be akin to ODM nomination. The only outcome is to cancel it. It would totally lack any credibility. Which is why IEBC have regulation to make sure everyone - esp the staff they hire - do their job. When you emasculate IEBC bosses and say their juniors are now their seniors - what purpose of IEBC.
Why not have Judy pareno of ODM conduct our national election. The outcome will the the same. chaos. Everyone doing whatever they want.
Pundit, I think IEBC's purpose is the same as that of every equivalent body in any democracy in the world. They organize elections, people vote, they count the votes in an open, public manner and announce. When there are disputes, someone runs to court and a recount or retally is ordered which is again done in an open, public manner.
I don't think so. It would be cancelled if it cannot be remedied. But if there is some prima facie evidence of a problem, it looks like the forms don't agree with each other etc, the court can order a retallying of those places which should take a day. If the court needs a recount, it can also order that. If the court then determines that the result of that recount/retally is final, then it's final.
I fail to understand why you have this massive faith in IEBC but not the court whose every ruling is public? Besides, if the court re-opens a result and orders it redone, that process will be open and public. It will not be behind doors with a secret formula only IEBC knows about but won't share despite this being our election and not IEBC's private patented IP.
Pundit, from your arguments, it would not be a stretch to surmise that you are saying, sure, Chebukait can do whatever he wants to give us the APPEARANCE of a clean result and that's ok. I don't think that is why I or anyone I know queue for hours to vote. So that some big brother Commissioner can rearrange things for me to look "right"...why bother with elections at all?
If the results are beyond remedy, the Court can make a decision that may be painful but still open. When SCOTUS stopped Florida manual recounts in 2000 even though it was very clear Gore had caught up with Bush, it was an open and public decision. It wasn't because some big brother who knows best went in a one-man conclave and came out with an announcement once white smoke was spotted up the chimney.