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The Invisible Election

By Heather Gerken, Election Law Blog. Posted November 18, 2008.


The 2008 presidential election did not end with a contested vote count, but that doesn't mean it went smoothly for voters or election officials.
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(Editor's note: The following report is part of the "Fixing Election Administration" series at Election Law Blog. The 2008 presidential election was one of those remarkable moments in politics when the nation was paying attention.

After a riveting primary season and general election, the race ended with millions watching the first black man to accept the presidency. There was also an invisible election in 2008 -- the nuts-and-bolts of election administration that journalists rarely report and citizens rarely see.

Even election experts catch only glimpses of the invisible election. In the immediate wake of the election, experts must rely on reporters, and reporters won't bother to investigate, let alone report on, problems that don't affect the outcome. It's only when the race is close -- as in Florida 2000 and Ohio 2004 -- that we see what really happened at the polling place. To be sure, when political scientists eventually start to crunch numbers, data can give us some sense of what problems arose. But the data we have are often so sparse and haphazard that they can give us only a partial sense of what occurred.

I am one of the few people to have gotten a pretty good view of the invisible election, and the reality does not match the reports of a smooth, problem-free election that have dominated the national media. As part of Obama's election protection team, I spent 18 hours working in the "boiler room," the spare office where 96 people ran national election day operations. Obama's election protection efforts, organized by Bob Bauer, were more generously funded, more precisely planned, and better organized than any in recent memory. Over the course of the day, thousands of lawyers, field staff, and volunteers reported the problems they were seeing in polling places across the country. A sophisticated computer program allowed the lawyers and staffers in the boiler room to review these reports in real time. In many places, everything ran smoothly, just as the media have reported. There were glitches, to be sure, but there were enough poll workers and election administrators to fix them as they came along.

Other jurisdictions simply fell apart as wave after wave of voters crashed down upon them. Thousands of people had to wait three hours or more to vote. In some places, there weren't enough machines to process all the voters. In others, there were plenty of voting machines, but voting booths stood empty because there weren't enough poll workers to check people in. Machines broke down. Parking lots were full. Polling places were hard to find or had been moved at the last minute. Poll workers didn't know basic rules about provisional ballots and election protocols. Far too many people showed up at the polls thinking they had registered, only to be told they weren't on the rolls. A bewildering number of polling places needed pens by mid-day because theirs had run out of ink. Many polling places simply ran out of ballots.

These problems occurred even though more voters than ever before (an estimated third of the electorate) cast their ballots before Election Day. They occurred even though everyone knew that turnout would be extremely high. They occurred even though at least one of the campaigns -- recognizing that victory depended on an election system capable of processing hundreds of thousands of new voters -- had done an extraordinary amount of work in helping election administrators get ready for the turnout tsunami that was approaching.


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See more stories tagged with: election administration, 2008 voting problems, 2008 election protection

Heather Gerken is the J. Skelly Wright Professor of Law at Yale Law School where she specializes in election law, constitutional law, and civil procedure.

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Please add into to the Election Protection Wiki
Posted by: davej on Nov 19, 2008 11:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Election Protection Wiki, online at http://epwiki.org, is gathering information to help media and policymakers look back at the election and find the information needed either directly or through links to other sources.

Please come help out the effort. Wikis are designed to make it easy for everyone to add information.

We also have an article on election reform proposals that we hope will help guide policymakers as they try to fix the problems and supporession efforts that occurred this year.

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

One way to "Simplify" Elections is to Deny Ballot Access
Posted by: steveconn on Nov 21, 2008 10:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If I am not mistaken Georgia "simplified" their election by making it nearly impossible to get on the ballot. Others, like North Carolina, not only made it impossible to get on the Ballot, but never got around to breaking out the results of 13,000 write-in votes, effectively invalidating them. Others like Oklahoma simply don't allow write-ins. If voters don't get the candidates they want on the ballot or have write-ins made impossible- like trying to put Gonzalez in too small a place as a Texas write-in, they don't enhance the civil right of voting or running for office.See my point, Professor?

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

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