Democrats Describe Efforts to Limit Voting Machines Problems
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As early voting has begun across the country, there have many news reports of electronic voting machine problems: from votes for president jumping between candidates on touch screens in West Virginia and Texas, to computer scanners not reading paper ballots in Florida or scanners in New Mexico that did not count votes for president or senate, to the candidates' names disappearing from computer screens in South Carolina.
Election integrity websites like VotersUnite.org and blogs like The BradBlog have chronicled the problems. Groups like Progressive Democrats of America have held conference calls discussing how to respond. While most reports do not say how many votes ultimately are at risk, almost are all prompted by the fear that, unless stopped, e-voting issues could cascade, particularly when the process enters the vote counting stage.
The overriding concern with paperless voting is there is no way to verify the accuracy of the underlying software used to record and count votes. As one participant on the PDA conference call said, "We're losing votes every day."
Implicit in the hand wringing is the question, 'Where is the Democratic Party when it comes to safeguarding the vote?'
The answer, according to lawyers and others who been pushing the Democratic National Committee to be pro-active on electronic voting issues, is that the DNC has assembled a nationwide team tasked to voting machine concerns. They have been at work behind the scenes since the start of early voting -- following up with state and local officials when problems arise, these lawyers say. While the DNC's effort may not seem apparent or sufficient to activists, those doing this work say it is unprecedented and comprehensive.
"Yes, the DNC's election protection program includes a voting machine task force -- it includes experienced e-voting litigators, experts on the various types of machines, voting rights lawyers and other specialists," said Justin Levitt, DNC National Voter Protection Counsel. "Our election protection effort, including our e-voting team, are prepared to respond rapidly and effectively to issues as they arise, including any issues involving technology.
"For example, during observation of logic and accuracy testing in New Mexico, we caught and fixed a ballot definition error before a single vote was threatened. We are monitoring voter protection issues around the country very closely, and responding in real-time -- often behind the scenes, but always active."
Electronic voting issues are only one area among the DNC's broader election protection effort, Levitt said in a "Promote the Vote" memo sent this month to lawyers volunteering for the Obama campaign.
"Though Election Day deployment is pivotal, the program comprises much more than just boots on the ground on Election Day. We've retained or opened pipelines to the nation's top experts on voting systems, registration databases, ballot design, student voting, and provisional ballots. We've been monitoring voting machines to ensure that they record the vote accurately; we've been examining ballots to minimize the potential for confusion; we've been pushing to eliminate lines, by ensuring that elections officials are ready to meet unprecedented turnout; we've been expanding opportunities for early and absentee voting; and we've been watching the voting rolls, looking for worrisome backlogs or purges, and comparing the rolls maintained by the states to our own comprehensive registration list. The care with which we have conducted the most ambitious voter registration program of any campaign to date is equaled only by the care with which we are ensuring those first-time registrants, and all voters in underserved communities, are educated about the rules of the election system and their rights as legitimate voters."The DNC's program began by tracking the nuts and bolts of voting in every election jurisdiction in the country, the memo said. That survey, begun after the 2006 election, catalogued arcane but important details: the county officials responsible for various voting functions; the voter registration standards and procedures; the procedures to verify voter registrations, maintain voter lists and purge voters; the voting machines used, including how machines are allocated to polling places, the security practices, the contractors who programmed them, vote count and audit procedures; the procedures for absentee voting and provisional ballots; Election Day preparations; polling place procedures; where vote counts are posted, and early voting practices.
See more stories tagged with: election protection, voter suppression, early voting, obama campaign, voting technology, votersunite.org, voting machine problems, 2008 presidential race, bradblog.com, progressive democrats of , election protection litig
Steven Rosenfeld is a senior fellow at Alternet.org and author of Count My Vote: A Citizen's Guide to Voting (AlterNet Books, 2008).
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