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Rights and Liberties

Election Theft Goes Global

By Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman, Free Press. Posted May 12, 2007.


From Ohio to Scotland, the controversy over electronic voting machines has become a global phenomenon.
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From Ohio and California to Scotland and France, the disputes surrounding electronic voting machines have gone truly global.

E-voting machines have already been extensively studied and condemned by a wide range of expert committees, commissions and colleges, including the General Accountability Office, the Carter-Baker Commission, Johns Hopkins University, Princeton University, Stanford University and others. Rigging of a recount in Cleveland has resulted in two felony convictions. The failures of e-voting machines have been the subject of numerous documentary films, including the aptly titled HBO special "Hacking Democracy."

Now the secretaries of state in Ohio and California are subjecting e-voting to still more official review. Ohio's Jennifer Brunner has announced she'll seek bids to conduct independent studies of both touch-screen machines, which record votes electronically, and optical scanners, which tabulate paper ballots electronically.

Brunner has already removed the entire board of elections of Cuyahoga County (Cleveland) in part because of a major fiasco caused by new electronic machines in the state's 2006 primary election. Voting rights activists vehemently opposed the $20 million purchase, but it was rammed through by Board Chair Robert Bennett and Executive Director Michael Vu.

The machines then caused long reporting delays. Vu resigned under pressure from the board. Bennett then resigned---along with the rest of the board---under pressure from Brunner. Bennett chairs the Ohio Republican Party, works closely with White House advisor Karl Rove, and was instrumental in delivering Ohio's decisive votes to George W. Bush in the 2004 presidential election. Two felony convictions have so far arisen from what prosecutors call a "rigged" recount that occurred that year in Cleveland, under Bennett's supervision.

The specifics of Brunner's investigation, which she wants done by September, are not yet public. But the newly elected Democrat says she intends to "fill in the gaps" on studies of Diebold, ES&S and Hart InterCivic machines whose vote tallies were key to giving Bush a second term. The conservative Columbus Dispatch has already predicted that the results of the investigation "likely will disappoint conspiracy theorists."

California's new Secretary of State Deborah Bowen will begin her study May 14, and wants it done by late July. An interagency agreement with the University of California will use three "top-to-bottom review teams" with about seven people each to inspect documents, previous studies, computer source code and a penetration attack to test system security. Cost is estimated at $1.8 million to be covered by system vendors and the Help America Vote Act. Systems from Diebold, ES&S, HartIntercivic, Sequoia and InkaVote of Los Angeles will be examined.

Other states are also re-evaluating their electronic voting systems, and fierce controversy is raging nationwide over a federal bill from Representative Rush Holt (D-NJ) which institutes certain voting reforms but allows the use of electronic machines to continue.

Now the issue has spread worldwide. Widespread cries of theft and fraud erupted in Ukraine, just before the US 2004 election. A forced re-vote ousted the "official" winner.

In Mexico, leftists contend the recent presidential election there was stolen just as Bush did it in the US, with some of the same personnel pulling it off.

Now similar cries are coming from Scotland and France. May 3 elections in Scotland using new electronic counting systems resulted in as many as 100,000 votes being classed as "spoilt papers." (About 90,000 such ballots from Ohio 2004 remain uncounted to this day).

Complex methods of tabulating and weighting the Scottish votes yielded "chaos." Several vote counts were suspended. In some races the tally of rejected ballots was greater than some candidates' winning margin. "This is a temporary interruption to one small aspect of the overall process," says a spokeswoman for DRS, the company responsible for the vote counting technology.

The language in France has not been so polite. A watershed presidential election has just been won by Nicolas Sarkozy, a blunt right-wing Reagan-Bush-style extremist over the socialist Segolene Royal. Sarkozy is a hard-edged authoritarian whose intense anti-immigrant rhetoric matches his support for the American war in Iraq and his avowed intent to slash France's social service system, including a public health program widely considered among the best in the world.

Like the balloting in Ukraine, the US, Scotland and Mexico, Sarkozy's victory was marred by angry, widespread complaints about dubious vote counts whose discrepancies always seem to favor the rightist candidate. Throughout France, the cry has arisen that the conservatives have done to Segolene Royal what Bush/Rove did to John Kerry.

In the not-so-distant past, other elections were engineered by George H.W. Bush, head of the Central Intelligence Agency and father of the current White House resident. During the Reagan-Bush presidencies, in the Philippines, Nicaragua, El Salvador and other key third world nations, expected leftist triumphs somehow morphed into rightist coups. "CIA destabilizations are nothing new," said former CIA station chief and Medal of Merit winner John Stockwell in 1987. "Guatemala in 1954, Brazil, Ghana, Chile, the Congo, Iran, Panama, Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador, Uruguay -- the CIA organized the overthrow of constitutional democracy."

The recent trend to privatizing vote counts, with corporations claiming "proprietary rights" to keep their hardware and software covert, has added a new dimension to an old tradition. The recent "e-victories" in the US and France have significantly tipped to the right the global balance among the major powers. So while Ohio and California conduct their studies of electronic voting, the whole world will be watching.

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See more stories tagged with: california, ohio, france, electronic voting, scotland

Bob Fitrakis is a political science professor in the Social and Behavioral Sciences department at Columbus State Community College and editor of the Free Press.

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Democracy is a meaningless concept
Posted by: UnEasyOne on May 12, 2007 1:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
as long as tabulation is done by a "magic box" that can't be checked or verified. This is issue number one to me, from which all else flows. Other things are more important, you say? Iraq?

How did we get there and why are we there now? Two stolen elections, that's how and why. If we don't save our Democracy now, it WILL be too late.

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

The best voting system.
Posted by: TheTruthSeeker on May 12, 2007 2:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If Americans wanted honest national elections with maximum participation, they would demand that Congress require a paper trail with the balloting taking place over two days, Saturday and Sunday. But then, if bumblebees had bigger wings, they wouldn’t bump their butts so hard on landing.

For the TRUTH about Iraq, Bush 43 and his treasonous neocon cabal, visit the following patriotic websites:

CommonDreams.org
FreedomCentralUSA.com
PhonyFighterPilot.com
VoteVets.org

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

Scotland's problems not electronic voting.
Posted by: heid on May 12, 2007 6:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I live in Scotland and voted in the recent election. The problems here had absolutely nothing to do with electronic ballots. There are NO electronic ballots here. Yes, there are electronic counting machines, and they were implemented for the first time. There were hiccups with them, but nothing more. The basic, paper ballots were still there and countable.

The problem had to do with voter confusion over how to vote. This problem was the direct result of the Labour party's chief of elections, who didn't bother to read the report that documented that a significant number of voters would have a problem with the layout of the ballots. Nothing more than that.

Although the local Council elections were done in a new, representational manner, the problems in the vote count had nothing to do with that. The problems with the spoiled ballots were the result of people not understanding the ballots for Scottish Parliament, in which there were two columns where the voter was supposed to vote for one candidate in each column. Many voters did not understand that they could not choose two in one column. Those were the ballots that were spoiled. And this is precisely the problem that the Labour elections supervisor ignored.

As a dual citizen of the UK and US, I am quite familiar with the voting problems in the US and am horrified by them. But the author did nothing to forward the cause of eliminating electronic voting by citing the Scottish problem in the latest election. Please, get your facts straight.

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» Wow, Blame The Victims... Posted by: Carl Street
» RE: Wow, Blame The Victims... Posted by: albrechtkrausse
» RE: Where do Conservatives come from? Posted by: albrechtkrausse
Computers are NOT the problem
Posted by: Carl Street on May 12, 2007 7:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The truth is elections have ALWAYS been phony -- computers, the Internet and other electronic communications have just given the general public the ability to detect the massive fraud that has always been going on. THAT is why you are being fed the red herring that "get rid of the computers and all will be well".

The government WANTS to get rid of the computers because they know they are a threat to their phony scam. They deliberately made the computer vote fraud easy to detect and in-your-face obvious; so that the public would demand the old ways that they have long ago learned to compromise without detection. How they must laugh themselves silly at their little meetings watching you build your own jails.

The truth is elections are a scam to get the politically ignorant and hopelessly illogical to believe that they or their neighbors of the "other political party" have somehow chosen all the horrors and injustices foisted upon them by government.

Elections keep the public feeling guilty; divided and blaming each other; and wasting their time and energy fighting each other instead of tackling the REAL problem, which is the government itself. The government is not benevolent parent; or your friend; rather it is a massive bureaucratic system dominated by the self-interests of hundreds of thousands of government employees.

These career criminals will do anything -- lie, cheat, steal, and KILL to protect their parasitical jobs and way of life. They have NO intention of giving up their gravy train; and why should they; when they have been getting away with their scam for generations.

People need to grow up and realize that government is the problem; NOT the solution to their problems. Government is like drugs or alcohol -- may make you feel better in the short term; but will kill you in the long run. AND the cure is NEVER more of the same. .

IF you REALLY want to fix things; the first step is to recognize you are a GOVERNMENTAHOLIC; look at yourself in the mirror and take the pledge to cut back government just like you cut back weeds growing in your garden. STOP BELIEVING anything you are told; just like you would not believe any other career criminals no matter what they promised.

Here is a link to someone who has said it far better than I ever can...
http://www.lewrockwell.com/shaffer/shaffer31.html

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

» The land of illusion... Posted by: Carl Street
» RE: The land of illusion... Posted by: kogwonton
» TWO CHOICES Posted by: kogwonton
» RE: TWO CHOICES Posted by: Carl Street
» RE: TWO CHOICES Posted by: kogwonton
» RE: TWO CHOICES Posted by: Carl Street
Verifygra™ — FAIL-SAFE VOTING: It’s as simple as 1,2,3
Posted by: dalea on May 12, 2007 9:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1 — OPEN (OR DISCLOSED) SOURCE SOFTWARE: All electronic voting machines and tabulation devices must use open (or disclosed) source software.

2 — PAPER BALLOT: All election technology must allow a voter to
(a) mark (by hand or machine) an optically-scannable paper ballot,
(b) inspect their ballot to confirm their vote, and
(c) physically place their ballot in a ballot box which undergoes secure, rigorous chain-of-custody safeguards.

3 — 10% RANDOM HAND COUNT IN EACH PRECINCT:
All electronic tallies (from machines which have printed or otherwise provided ballots AND/OR independently-programmed tabulation devices which have optically scanned said ballots) in an election MUST be verified by publicly hand counting a randomly selected 10% of the ballots cast in each precinct.

For links and more details: www.verifygra.com

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

osd
Posted by: osd on May 12, 2007 6:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I never could understand when it appeared that the "machines" were not working correctly. Why did they not ask for a refund. Do they not come with a guarrentee? If not, then the people who picked them out, are part of the whole mess. Can they say long prison term. This is no small item America. This is how the "New World Order" is taking over the Planet by storm.

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

We Use Paper
Posted by: braxxian on May 12, 2007 7:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Down here in Australia its compulsiry to vote in Federal elections. We have overcome the urge to use electronic voting because of the huge possibilty of voter fraude. We use a far more simple method, paper.

All Australian ballots are cast using paper votes with the various parties and individuals up for election. The idea of voting machines is a vary scary thought as the potentiol for misconduct or break down is huge. Its rather strange for us to understand why a country that totes itself as the greates democracy in the world uses such a strange option for voting, one that is fraught with danger.

Sometimes the simple things work best.

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

» RE: We Use Paper Posted by: Tokyo Tuds
» I use paper too... Posted by: Carl Street
The land of illusion...
Posted by: Carl Street on May 13, 2007 10:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sounds like you have been conned hook. line, and sinker -- the old mythology that "democracy" means "we" are the governors is laughable in the extreme! I did not know there was ANYONE left on planet earth that still believed that tripe. No wonder we have to look for intelligent life in outer space -- there certainly is little evidence of it here.

You have a nearly 3,800 times the probability of influencing the design of next year's Chevrolet by owning one share of voting stock in General Motors than you have of influencing government policy with your vote in the USA government corporation.

Since you seem to be math challenged, I will give you a clue, you have nearly a ZERO chance of influencing the design of next year's Chevrolet -- so what does THAT say about your chances with voting in the USA???!

AND, that assumes the votes are counted honestly and that politicians are honest and will keep their word. If you beieve ANY of that, please call me right away -- I still have some Brooklyn Bridge stock I can let you have at a good price... :)

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

» RE: The land of illusion... Posted by: Logic's Edge
» RE: The land of illusion... Posted by: Carl Street
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