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Democracy and Elections

Bad Voter Lists May Have Botched New Mexico's Democratic Caucus

By Steven Rosenfeld, AlterNet. Posted February 8, 2008.


Nearly 13 percent of New Mexico Democrats found they were not on precinct voter rolls when they showed up to choose a presidential nominee.
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Democratic party officials in New Mexico may have used an incomplete list of registered voters on Super Tuesday -- prepared for the secretary of state by a private vendor -- causing nearly 13 percent of Democrats to find they were not on precinct voter rolls when they showed up to choose a presidential nominee.

As a result, the New Mexico Democratic Party is now in the process of validating and counting more than 17,000 provisional ballots. That count will likely determine who won the nation's closest Democratic nominating contest so far in 2008. It is unclear whether the voter list that resulted in so many provisional ballots -- or an updated list -- will be used to verify, validate and count the 17,000 votes.

With 183 out of 184 precincts reporting, Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., held a lead of 1,092 votes -- 67,921 votes compared to 66,829 for Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., according to the Associated Press. That tally does not include the provisional ballot count.

"The Democratic Party ran that election," said James Flores, spokesman for Secretary of State Mary Herrera, a Democrat. "There is a (voter) list, and it is compiled by ES&S (Election Systems and Software). The Democratic Party requested this list from the secretary of state's office... There could be hundreds of reasons why there are provisional ballots."

Flores is correct. Voters could have gone to the wrong precinct. People could have thought they were registered to vote when they were not. Or -- as some New Mexico election integrity activists think -- the state could have used an inaccurate list prepared by a private vendor.

"I heard the database that the Democrats got was printed on Jan. 24," said Patricia Leahan, director of the Las Vegas Peace and Justice Center, which provides a range of community services and advocates for voting rights in the state's northeastern region. "That means anyone who registered at the last minute, because it takes time to enter all that data, would not have shown up ... On the other hand, there were people at the precincts who said they were registered and lived at the same address for years."

No New Mexico Democratic Party official returned any calls or answered emails on Thursday. The telephone at state party headquarters said that office was closed until Monday, Feb. 11. Flores did not respond to a subsequent email to reply to Leahan's charge that the state's Democratic Party could have received an incomplete voter list.

ES&S officials could not be reached for comment Thursday.

The problems faced by New Mexico voters on Super Tuesday are potentially bigger than awarding 26 delegates and 12 superdelegates to the Democratic National Convention. Many states now rely on electronic voting systems -- from voter registration databases, to electronic poll books at precincts, to voting and vote-counting machines.

The breakdown in any of these systems, such as possibly flawed voter lists in New Mexico or malfunctioning electronic poll books in Georgia -- which was documented by that state's largest newspaper on Tuesday -- could end up disenfranchising large numbers of voters.


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See more stories tagged with: presidential primary, new mexico, votiing

Steven Rosenfeld is a senior fellow at AlterNet.org and co-author of "What Happened in Ohio: A Documentary Record of Theft and Fraud in the 2004 Election," with Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman (The New Press, 2006).

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Greg Palast already warned us about this
Posted by: lb on Feb 8, 2008 6:07 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Go back and read the chapter on New Mexico in "Armed Madhouse". One of the reasons I wasn't crazy about Bill Richardson was because of the irregularities in voting in NM in the 2006 election. Palast thinks there are alot of minorities in NM that are being disenfranchised.

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Can't the private sector do anything right?
Posted by: mike1997 on Feb 8, 2008 6:12 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I expect the Rupublicans to reflexively turn to the private sector to do government work, afterall even if it shoddy work their friends will make a bundle! But too many Democrats have been sucked into the corporate maw and now they are in the same trap. When are we going to learn; The private sector does somethings much better than government. But other things, like running election and providing all citizens with health insurance are much better done by the public sector!

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Incompetence
Posted by: outlander55 on Feb 8, 2008 7:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I live in New Mexico and was not very impressed with the "caucus". I stood on line for over two and a half hours before I got the chance to vote. Everyone on line complained about the lengthy wait. In comparison, in 2004, I voted in the primary with only a ten or fifteen minute wait. Like most ventures in NM, incompetence ruled the day. If it weren't for the great weather here, I would be inclined to move to somewhere better. This is what happens when we let our "friends" do the job instead of qualified people.

Good night and good luck...

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Hope for the best, expect the worst
Posted by: dgoodebeader@yahoo.com on Feb 8, 2008 8:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Provisional ballots here in NM were given to (1) people who were not registered as Democrats (2) people who voted outside their designated district. Why would people vote outside their district? To avoid 3 to 4 hour waits. As I saw it, the disenfranchised here had nothing to do with race, gender, ethnicity, religious affiliation or number of tattoos, but rather those who lacked the time it took to vote. Many people left in my district when they saw the line inside the building (after waiting in line outside for 15 to 20 minutes in the wind and cold), the over 700 people sitting in the auditorium, and having volunteers telling us that at minimum, we were looking at a 2 hour wait. Thankfully, I was waiting to vote with a friend at my side and my knitting in my bag. Not everyone could give up that much time. My guess is that those doing the planning have never heard “hope for the best, expect the worst”, or there would have been more voting locations here.

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ella
Posted by: dolgre on Feb 8, 2008 8:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
New Mexico--the only place where "Democratic voter fraud" actually works against Democrats!!

There are always irregularities here, period, but it has only been in the last few years, where results are often less than one percent difference between candidates that it has ever mattered to anyone. I swear, every election year, someone in Las Cruces or Dona Ana County "loses" entire boxes of ballots, or finds them stashed inexplicably in a closet in the county courthouse. The state only decided to get serious about putting voter registrations in accessible computers in 2006, when we also pretty much converted to paper ballots. Here's my question: when we vote early here, you go to one of two or three polling places, they find your name in the computer, and print you up a customized ballot for your precinct or district, and you vote away. WHY ON EARTH do we have people needing to have specific locations to vote at, then be turned away if you go to the wrong one--on voting day, the last day you can fix a mistake?????

As far as this poorly run caucus--My husband and I were shocked to find out that we were not listed as registered Democrats, and so we could not vote (we are supporters of Obama). He was told he supposedly changed his status to "Decline to State" in September, 2004. I had changed my status from DTS to Democrat before the 2006 election, but apparently, no one at the Secretary of State's office had any documentation that it occurred. For voters in Rio Rancho to have had only one polling place was an outrage. And they "outsourced" our voter registration rolls to a contractor? WTF?

Quite frankly, given how close this race is, I don't see how anyone could certify the results of this damn thing.

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Earthdog
Posted by: Earthdog on Feb 8, 2008 9:20 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Orwellian "Help America Vote Act" required that all states convert to a statewide electronic voter registration database. New Mexico fully converted in January 2006, turning over our state's voter registration list to a private corporation, ES&S.

Therein lies the problem (well, one of the problems).

First, many people were told at the NM Dem Caucus sites that they were not on the voter registration list. Many of those folks in fact were legitimate, long-time registered voters who were at their proper polling place, but they were forced to vote on provisional ballots.

As an election integrity activist in NM, I was called during caucus day by folks with complaints. They did not want to vote on a provisional ballot, as about 50% of those are usually not counted here in NM for various reasons. When I contacted the county clerk to see if these voters were legitimately registered, he found their names in his database. These voters should have been given regular ballots.

For some reason, the voter registration list provided to the Democratic Party by the Secretary of State via ES&S (the private corporation that has no business being involved in our elections) was incorrect.

BUT the database kept at the COUNTY level by our locally elected officials WAS correct.

There is something wrong with this picture. We need to call for the un-privatizing of our elections.

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ishmael
Posted by: Ishmael on Feb 8, 2008 10:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I voted in the New Mexico caucus in Silver City and had no problems. I was informed by the local community bulletin board e-mail list that I would vote in a different location. I was in and out in less than 5 minutes. Guess I was one of the lucky ones.

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Steve Rosenfeld - in the NM newspapers
Posted by: sageworks on Feb 8, 2008 11:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How funny, this morning i looked at the Santa Fe newspapers website to see if NM's results were settled yet, and there was Steve. And now, I see he is on AlterNet. Good going. Say hi to NM for me. That was an awfully funny article in the Santa Fe New Mexican though about tabulating election results the NM way.

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jcmso3cd
Posted by: jcmso3cd on Feb 8, 2008 5:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Imagine the Banking system working like the voting system (scary thought). 100's of millions of ATM transactions are made daily. What is so difficult in accurately tracking a some 10's of millions of votes every two years?

Oh you get a receipt with every banking transaction...... what a novel idea! What would they think of next... ATM Voting Cards to use at your nearest ATM machine? Deposit your money in safety, deposit your Vote in safety. Imagine no more polling places, chads, provisional ballots, absentee ballots, standing in long lines, no more district controls, etc. Passwords can expire after each voting cycle and renewed with proper answers to voters preset list of secret questions. We just have to decide which vendor should be allowed to make all the money from this new voting system and when this voting system messes up it should be tied to the banking system and maybe the IRS too. What fun!

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» RE: jcmso3cd Posted by: GPFrank
» RE: jcmso3cd Posted by: GPFrank
New Mexico voting mess
Posted by: Bugaboo on Feb 8, 2008 6:57 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The land of disenchantment strikes again. New voting machines were bought from vendors who provide non-existent support. Voting rolls OUTSOURCED? Ballot boxes taken HOME???

wow. just wow.

All we'd like to do is to have a secure and safe voting system.

WHYYYYYY is that 'so hard'?

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nonlabel
Posted by: nonlabel on Feb 8, 2008 7:34 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This was not democracy that happened in New Mexico. We continue to hear about voters that waited in line for 1-3 hours. I am a voter who refuses to stand in line that long. I am arthritic, and just can't stand up for that long. It should not be that way. This election discriminated against people who are of poor health, impatient, in a hurry, have children to feed or tend to (childless people would be more likely to stand in line for such a long period of time) AND people in larger urban areas which were more crowded than rural areas. The wait here in Las Vegas was 1 hour, and many of us left. How many must have walked out in Rio Rancho, where the wait was three hours? All we can spend on an election this important was 300K? Shouldn't an election be more important than a University Sports Coach? If this election is certifiable, what in the world would constitute un-certifiable? What's the standard? Bottom line: THIS ELECTION DOES NOT REFLECT THE WILL OF THE DEMOCRATIC VOTERS OF NEW MEXICO and should be thrown out and done over.

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