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The Next FloridaPosted on Jan 23, 2008By Marie Cocco WASHINGTON—Election Day began with voting machines refusing to start up. It ended with them refusing to shut down. “It was a very stressful day,” says Sandy Martin, director of registration and elections in Horry County, S.C. She still doesn’t know the precise reasons her county’s computerized, touch-screen machines balked at starting up last Saturday as the polls opened for the state’s Republican primary. Some voters who showed up early complained they were turned away from polling places, and about 6,000 votes wound up being cast on paper—some on printed ballots, others on any piece of paper a poll worker could find. The leading theory for the starting-up problem is that election workers who prepared the equipment failed to run a final procedure meant to set the computers’ vote counters to zero. More evident, Martin says, is that the machines refused to close down at the end of the day because of a programming error. Because South Carolina’s Democratic primary is not being held until this Saturday, the computers were programmed to shut themselves down on Jan. 26—not at the end of Republican balloting on Jan. 19. “We had to go into the election menu and tell it to close manually,” Martin told me. Neither glitch affected the vote count, she says. Still, Horry County has earned itself a minor footnote to presidential electoral history. It is another tale of voting machine failure that causes confusion and anger, marring what should be a gratifying civic exercise in which every eligible voter is allowed to cast a ballot—and is assured that every ballot is properly counted. After the debacle of the 2000 presidential election in Florida, we were supposed to end all this. We haven’t. As the presidential candidates careen around the country in preparation for primaries in nearly two dozen states on Feb. 5, there is no reason to believe balloting will go smoothly and plenty of reason to anticipate that it won’t. According to an unpublished analysis by Common Cause, 17 states that are still to hold their presidential primaries are at “high risk” of experiencing voting errors due to miscounted or undercounted votes. These states include New Jersey, where despite a new law requiring a voter-verified paper trail for touch-screen machines, election officials opted to delay installing new equipment until June, four months after the state’s Super Tuesday primary. Then there is New York, which still votes on antiquated lever machines. The New York Times has estimated that in November’s general election, a third of voters will cast ballots for president using touch-screen machines that provide no paper record of the vote that could later be used in a recount. This touch-and-hope method of voting persists despite chronic difficulties and disputes over the touch-screen machines’ performance. Complaints have mounted that the computers have flipped a choice from one candidate to another, even as the voter watches. The systems often crash or freeze, and require rebooting that can leave a voter wondering if his or her choice was recorded or wiped out. The most famous mystery involves an apparent 18,000-vote undercount in a hotly contested 2006 Florida congressional contest, an anomaly that has never been fully explained but which the loser contends was due to a computer error that failed to count those votes. Florida is now replacing touch-screen machines but roughly half the state’s voters won’t have them in time for the Jan. 29 primary, according to Common Cause. The switch is expected to be complete before November. This is what years of partisan bickering, followed more recently by inexplicable congressional dithering, have brought us. Republicans once resisted any acknowledgement that voting systems—not ignorant voters—can and do cause miscounts. To admit error was to cast suspicion on President Bush’s 2000 victory. But hundreds of reported machine malfunctions in everything from school board elections to one-party primaries have now convinced many politicians in both parties that voting systems, notably the touch-screen systems, can and do fail. One by one, governors, state legislatures and elections officials are converting these systems to those in which some sort of paper record is produced. Congress could speed the changeover dramatically by approving pending legislation to help states finance the transition. Florida can now be confident that it will not be the next Florida. But unless Congress and the states act together—urgently—some state, somewhere, is bound to be. Marie Cocco’s e-mail address is mariecocco(at)washpost.com. © 2008, Washington Post Writers Group Previous item: The Invisible War Next item: That Dismal Democratic Debate Elsewhere: . CommentsAre you a Truthdig member yet? Login now, or register with Truthdig.
By Bill Blackolive, January 24 at 9:22 am # We shall wallow hither and we shall wallow thither till in this very century it is publicly accepted there is US coverup of 9/11.
By Kathyrn, January 24 at 9:21 am # Attention All VotersA must read- Also google Boston’s Children’s Hospital
By Kathryn, January 24 at 7:55 am # All Voters- A must Read- The State of MassachusettsTo understand the condition of the State of Massachusetts, visit http://www.massresistance.org. Also google Boston’s Children’s Hospital Sex Change Clinic. God’s Children God’s Children have lost their way
By Kathryn Borkowski, January 24 at 5:41 am # What all voters should readTo understand the condition of the State of Massachusetts, visit http://www.massresistance.org. Also google Boston’s Children’s Hospital Sex Change Clinic. God’s Children God’s Children have lost their way
By julie d'oceanie, January 24 at 3:45 am # New York, Keep Your MachinesWhat’s wrong with New York’s antiquated lever machines? Is it possible to hack them from a remote location? Do they fail to accurately register the vote? Were they bought from powerful corporations whose executives have suspiciously close connections to Republican operatives? At a cost of billions of apparently wasted tax dollars? Could we please get our money back from these electronic voting machine companies? Because it’s pretty clear that their machines don’t work properly. If I bought a toaster-oven and it failed to toast my bagel I would take it back to the store and demand a refund. I don’t see how programming the machine to print out a piece of paper is going to help anything. Garbage in, garbage out, right? I voted just one time on an electronic voting machine and it made me feel very uneasy. Since that election (the 2004 debacle) was the second time that I suffered serious Democratic disenfranchisement, I have vowed never to vote again until we have a full accounting of all these troubling issues, and until we can vote by a method that inspires confidence in the integrity of the system. (Don’t know what happened in Ohio in 2004? Read Congressman Conyer’s Report. Or Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s piece in Rolling Stone.) Please don’t yell at me for refusing to vote. It is my right not to participate. And voting on a system you can’t trust is, IMHO, worse than not voting at all. If you were playing poker and you knew that one of the other players was cheating, would you continue to play?
By Johnny Smith, January 24 at 3:15 am # Diebold... failed to run a final procedure meant to set the computers’ vote counters to zero.... ... because of a programming error.... “We had to go into the election menu...” ...computers have flipped a choice from one candidate to another, even as the voter watches… ... The systems often crash or freeze, and require rebooting that can leave a voter wondering if his or her choice was recorded or wiped out… And people used to worry about hanging chads!!!! Add Your Comment |
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