Russ Baker is mainstream and has a broad readership. After you read his article, you might want to email him and let him know more about Blackwell, and point out to him that "It's the tabulators, stupid."
As time passes and allegations of fraud are investigated, it seems clearer that the story of the 2004 election is more about incompetence and dysfunction than intentional misconduct.
<snip>Many of us fear that the Ohio election was stolen because people – like talk-show sleuths, blogger number-crunchers, forensic attorneys, crusading professors and partisan activists – keep telling us so. We don't even know most of these people, yet we gladly forward their e-mails and web links, their pronouncements, analyses, essays and statistical exercises. While their credentials may not be that impressive, we listen to their conspiracy theories because – frightened by the direction our country has taken – we want to believe them. <snip>
Voting Irregularities
Charge: Misallocation of voting machines
Finding: True
Intentional? Probably not<snip>
<snip>Charge: Miscounting of absentee votes
Finding: False<snip>
<snip>Charge: Tampering with voting machines
Finding: Probably false<snip>
<snip>Challengers May Have Good Intentions But Bad Facts<snip>
<snip>Charge: Voting company fraud
Finding: Unlikely<snip>
>snip>Charge: Exit poll results were more accurate than actual ballots
Finding: False
Explanation of Problem: Imperfect nature of polls<snip>
<snip>Half-baked conspiracy theories are damaging to the public confidence in democracy. We could use a few less conspiracy theorists, and a few more Griffins. It takes a pretty big person to admit that one's own side screwed up, or was simply bested in a fight (even a nasty one), or to accept, and tackle, the growing alienation of potential voters in America. And the unexciting, labor-intensive process of analyzing and fixing the machinery of the people's will.<snip>
http://www.alternet.org/story/20934/russ@russbaker.com