Guest guest Posted November 5, 2004 Report Share Posted November 5, 2004 S Fri, 5 Nov 2004 08:22:16 -0800 (PST) Fwd:The Ghost Votes in the Machine- Voting Snafus Across the Nation http://www.counterpunch.org/harrison11032004.html The Ghost Votes in the Machine Voting Snafus Across the Nation By ANN HARRISON A non-partisan coalition monitoring problems at polling sites has reported failures of electronic voting machines around the United States - some of which recorded touch screen votes for candidates voters had not selected. While errors were resolved in the cases brought to the attention of poll watchers, many voters remain uncertain whether their proper vote was cast in a bitterly contested election in which President George Bush has claimed victory. " A number of people who thought they were voting for Kerry, when the screen came up it showed they were voting for Bush, " said Cindy Cohn, legal director for the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) which is a member of the coalition. " We've seen it across several voting systems, not just one machine. " As of November 3rd, members of the Election Protection Coalition received 4,459 reports of ballot problems, 2,867 calls about polling place irregularities, and 7,152 complaints regarding voter registration glitches. Another 1,074 people phoned in to say that they had witnessed voter intimidation. Unlike the voting problems that occurred during the 2000 elections, the voting problems reported during the 2004 election were spread across the entire country and aggravated the long lines voters endured at polling places. The group Common Cause also reported 50,000 calls reporting voting problems to its election hot-line, although not all the complaints were related to e-voting problems. Election observers with EFF and the Verified Voting Foundation (VVF) said the reported e-voting failures may be relatively common with touch-screen machines. The groups noted that incorrectly recorded votes made up about 20 percent of the e-voting errors reported through the Election Incident Reporting System (EIRS), an on-line database used by the Election Protection Coalition to record and track voting problems. The EIRS tracked 16,906 total voting incidents on election day. According to coalition members, the most severe e-voting failures occurred in Pennsylvania and New Orleans where poll workers turned voters away because they did not have enough paper ballots on hand after machines failed. Some voters, perhaps believing claims by e-voting companies that paper ballots were somehow less reliable, or worried about the counting of provisional ballots, refused to fill out paper ballots. Other voters found that their ballot had been pre-marked. In New Orleans, e-voting machines manufactured by Sequoia Voting Systems failed to boot up on election day and local election officials had no back up plan. According to Cohn, EFF attorneys filed a complaint in Civil District Court attempting to force election officials in the Parish of New Orleans to keep polls open late. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) also filed a complaint urging polls to remain open late to accommodate disenfranchised voters. The machines that failed in New Orleans were older Sequoia AVC Edge machines and 80 incidents of failure were recorded across a number of precincts. Some precincts never opened. EFF lawyers also negotiated with election officials in Ohio, Mississippi and Pennsylvania in an effort to keep polls open longer in areas where voting problems had been reported. The coalition said voting machines made by a number of manufacturers malfunctioned including those produced by Diebold Election Systems, Election Systems & Software, Hart InterCivic and Sequoia. Problems with Danaher voting machines were also reported in Pennsylvania. Will Doherty, VVF Executive Director, said the largest overall problem was a total breakdown of e-voting machines causing some voters to stand in long lines for four to five hours. Some poll workers reported calibration problems with machines. Voters in some precincts waited for an election judge to decide whether to offer paper ballots prompting some to leave before casting their vote. " It's hard to see how voters in these locations were offered a fair chance to vote, " said Doherty. In some reported cases, candidates were missing entirely from the ballots. Doherty said there were more reports of Democrats gone missing than Republicans. " Overall we are seeing systemic problems with these machines across all manufacturers, " said Doherty. Doherty said the problems made clear the need for voter verified paper trails which can be used to document potential tampering of machines or complete failure of the equipment. He added that as of mid-afternoon PST on election day, there were also 405 identification related problems reported involving poll officials demanding that voters prove their identity something they are not required to do. The Verified Voting Foundation and Computer Professionals For Socials Responsibility created the Election Incident Reporting System (EIRS) to report, track and respond to election concerns. The groups set up a website with an incident report form, and toll-free telephone hot-line 1-866-OUR-VOTE to gather information on voting irregularities. The web site http://verifiedvoting.org features interactive maps which illustrate voting incidents by county, state and the nation as a whole. The EIRS system is being used by the 60 member organizations of the Election Protection Coalition to build a database of voting information for use in post-election litigation and legislation. The coalition will also use the information to push for new voting regulations while lobbying public officials and e-voting vendors for improved voting processes and procedures. Because of the 2000 election meltdown in Florida, election watchers closely monitored polling places in that state. Matt Zimmerman, an EFF voting attorney in Miami, Florida said there have been multiple reports of voting machine problems in Florida where incorrect candidates had been selected by e-voting machines and voters had problems going back and changing their votes. He said most of these malfunctions occurred with the Sequoia Edge machine in Palm Beach County were voters were presented with preselected choices on the entire electronic ballot which were often skewed away from Democratic candidates. More- http://www.counterpunch.org/harrison11032004.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.