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Democracy and Elections

"Emergency" Bill Tries to Make Electronic Voting More Accurate, But Will It?

By Steven Rosenfeld, AlterNet. Posted April 3, 2008.


Looking ahead to the fall election, a House bill lets states decide if they want to replace paperless voting systems -- or just add printers.
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Efforts to improve the machinery that will count the 2008 presidential vote fell prey to a classic Washington compromise on Wednesday, when a House committee approved a bill giving money to both opponents and supporters of controversial paperless electronic voting systems.

The "Emergency Assistance for Secure Elections Act of 2008," or H.R. 5036, now goes to the House floor, where its goal is helping cities and counties create a "verifiable" paper trail and audits for individual votes cast for president and Congress.

But just how that paper trail is achieved is broadly defined in the bill. Opponents of paperless electronic voting can seek federal funds to buy paper ballot-based systems, where voters mark ballots by hand and computer scanners tally the result. Several states, notably California, Ohio and Florida, already are making this transition. Meanwhile, proponents of all-electronic voting can keep their machines but seek funds to add printers that theoretically will allow voters to see if their choices have been properly recorded.

Under the bill, jurisdictions can also federal money to buy back-up paper ballots for precincts outfitted with computer touch-screen voting machines. They also can seek funds for audits if they have a paper trail for every ballot castl. In that case, they would have to meet a minimum standard of hand counting at least 2 percent of the ballots cast. The audit's goal is to ensure the vote count is accurate.

"It will reduce the uncertainly, questions and disputes about the election in many places in our country," said Rep. Rush Holt, D-NJ and the bill's chief sponsor. "It is intended for counties to provide voter verified paper ballots and or audits. And although it does not establish a national standard [for a paper trail], it encourages counties and states to do the right thing. And that means offer voter verified paper ballots and audits."

Election integrity activists, who documented many problems with paperless, electronic voting systems and played a big part in convincing top officials in several states to return to paper ballot-based voting, were generally disappointed in the bill.

"I do not support any version of the HOLT bill or any other proposed bill that solidifies the continued use of DREs with printer," said Nevada's Patricia Axelrod, who has an extensive technical background, in an e-mail Wednesday. DRE, or direct recording equipment, is industry slang for the paperless voting systems.

"I am well-seasoned in the use of such machines as I battling against the Sequoia AVC Edge with Verivote printer now in use throughout the entire State of Nevada since 2004," Axelrod said. "I hasten to assure you that the attachment of a Mickey Mouse printer to a poorly designed, engineered and manufactured computer - one built to the same specifications as your average lap or desk top computer; only with less oversight - is not going to assure accurate and reliable elections."

"I do not support any legislation that perpetuates the myth of verified voting," said New Hampshire's Nancy Tobi, Election Defense Alliance legislative director. "The problem is the current bill is fundamentally wrong in its originating premise. Holt and his supporters believe the key is the audit, but the key is the first count. And the audits they recommend are not even audits. They are spot checks. So you have a fake audit for a fake election."

Holt acknowledged H.R. 5036 was a compromise bill. Activists following its progress in Washington said lobbyists for the disabled community, election officials and the voting machine industry pushed to preserve the use of DREs. The House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-MD, siding with those constituencies, apparently would not allow a bill on the House floor that said paper ballots were superior to paperless voting, they said. However, Holt said most election supervisors at the local level recognized that the paper-based optical-scan systems were more reliable and accurate than DREs with printers.


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See more stories tagged with: emergency assistance for , h.r. 5036, election 2008, electronic voting, rush holt

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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View:
How the Republicans will try to steal 2008?
Posted by: kwalla on Apr 3, 2008 12:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the election is close, which it most likely will be, and the Republicans are losing by a close margin, perhaps they will clumsily shift MORE votes to Obama-- I mean whoever the Democratic nominee is. It will get caught (just coincidently with the help of some Republicans), there will be a re-vote and the common opinion that the Dems tried to rig it will easily shift the re-vote in McCains favor. And voila: 4 more years!

Just a rumor or..?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

We must have paper ballots and hand counting to save our democracy.
Posted by: Christie on Apr 3, 2008 4:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, ATM machines print out an accurate receipt for us every time we withdraw money. They are programmed to do so. But a computer CAN be programmed to record a vote for one candidate and print out a receipt for the other candidate. Write to your House Rep to educate himself or herself on this situation. (Refer to "Emergency Assistance for Secure Elections Act of 2008," or H.R. 5036). Tell your representative that we must have paper ballots, so that although they may be originally electronically scanned, the results can be verified by hand counting the ballots. Of course, even better would be if they are originally hand-counted.

The information is readily available on many Websites online . For an in-depth analysis of voter fraud via electronic voting machines, see: Brad Blog, Brennan Center for Justice-Press Release and search “voter fraud“ for numerous articles and books especially “The Best Democracy That Money Can Buy” by Greg Pallast.

Some of us say that, after two stolen elections, we must have paper ballots and hand counting to regain our democracy.

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markovchain
Posted by: Dr.Zorro on Apr 3, 2008 7:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"When it comes to computerized vote counting or tabulating, there are no safeguards. It's not a door without locks, it's a house without doors."

-- Howard Strauss
Director of Advanced Computer Applications at Princeton
University and nationally renowned expert in the field
of computer voting.
Source: Relevance Magazine

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Still Room for Compromise
Posted by: fhalasz on Apr 3, 2008 9:19 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We don't have to mark ballots by hand; we just have to verify them as part of the recording process. If the voting machine were to produce a printed paper ballot which then was physically taken by the voter to a scanner for recording, we'd have the needed verification without having to mark the ballot by hand. Hand marking slows the voting process.

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A few points
Posted by: willymack on Apr 3, 2008 11:38 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1. As long as the same turds own or run Diebold or Sun Systems, I will oppose electronic voting and vote tabulation. Everywhere.2. I have absolutely NO doubt the rethugs will rig the 2008 "election" and will get away with it. Again. The ONLY way the Democratic nominee can possibly win is if the result is an overwhelming landslide. This is unlikely to happen because there are too many bigoted ignoramuses who would NEVER vote for a woman or man of color, no matter how well qualified.3. We WILL attack Iran with Crazy John at the helm, and it will be a far greater tragedy than Iraq. This is a pretty gloomy prediction, but let's face it; it's based on facts. I can only hope I'm wrong about all this.

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Best thing for Electronic Voting...
Posted by: Quannah on Apr 3, 2008 1:03 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
ABOLISH IT!

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never be honest and secret elections
Posted by: billwald on Apr 3, 2008 2:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Voter lists should be published on the web. So should be every voter's name, address, and vote. That way anyone can write a program and make his own vote count. A voter should not be afraid to put his money where his mouth (vote) is.

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