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Fwd: [GPOC] Lynn Landes: Faking Democracy - Americans Don't Vote, Machines Do, & Ballot Printers Can't Fix That
Another perspective, similar to that in an article that I believe Evan
Ravitz forwarded before, that using ANY machines in voting is
Unconstitutional, even ballot printers.
Given the continued doubletalk and lack of representation we've got
here in Boulder County, can you imagine what it's like in the rest of
the state and country?
Perhaps ditching the machines entirely is indeed the only way to go,
especially if they are going to refuse to let us verify their work any
other way.
Joe
Begin forwarded message:
Date: April 7, 2004 12:51:09 AM MDT
To: grns-gpoc@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [GPOC] Lynn Landes: Faking Democracy - Americans Don't Vote,
Machines Do, & Ballot Printers Can't Fix That
Faking Democracy - Americans Don't Vote, Machines Do, & Ballot
Printers Can't Fix That
by Lynn Landes 4/6/04
Machines will produce 99.4% of the election results for the upcoming
2004 presidential election. With all the hoopla over voting machine
"glitches," porous software, leaked memos, and the creepy corporations
that sell and service these contraptions, and with all the controversy
that surrounds campaign financing, voter registration, redistricting
issues, and the general privatization of the election process - we
are missing the boat on the biggest crisis facing our democracy.
Americans aren't really voting. Machines are. Call it faking
democracy.
And no one seems to be challenging it. As far as I can tell from my
own investigations and from discussions with law professors,
attorneys, and others, there has never been a lawsuit that challenges
the right of machines to be used in the voting process. Recent
lawsuits that have been filed by Susan Marie Webber of California and
Congressman Robert Wexler (D-FL) are based on verification. The
plaintiffs want voting machines to produce paper ballots so that
voters can verify that the machine's output matched their input. They
also want paper ballots for manual audits and recounts.
But these lawsuits, as well as proposed legislation in Congress from
Congressman Rush Holt and Senator Bob Graham, leave voting machines in
control of election results. The public is being offered a set of
false choices - paperless touchscreen voting machines or touchscreen
machines with ballot printers. Machine-free elections are not on the
menu.
Part of the reason may be that people believe the Help America Vote
Act (HAVA) requires states to use voting machines. It does no such
thing, not even for the disabled. Anther reason the machine-free
option is not widely discussed is the popular misconception that
people will not "go back" to paper ballots. But they already have.
Absentee voting continues to grow in popularity despite real security
problems with the chain of custody of the ballots.
It is particularly confounding to this writer that our foremost legal
scholars and political scientists have yet to address this issue.
Instead, a bold band of tech heads are leading a charge against
paperless voting machines. But, they are not looking at the broader
Constitutional issues. Being technical, they're calling for a
technical fix - ballot printers.
The only fix that will give Americans back their constitutional right
to vote is to ditch the machines.
In Bush v. Gore, the Supreme Court said that a "legal vote" is one in
which there is a "clear indication of the intent of the voter."
Voting machines (lever, optical scan, touchscreen, the Internet, etc.)
produce circumstantial evidence of the voter's intent, at best. Think
of voting as a three-step process: marking, casting, and counting
ballots. Once a machine is involved in any one of those steps, the
result is hard evidence of the machine's output and circumstantial
evidence of the voter's input.
Many activists are calling for ballot printers, hand counts, and
strict audits to ensure honest election results. That will not fix the
problem of using voting machines. Voting rights are for people, not
machines. The voting process must be transparent in order for voting
rights to be enforced. Machines are not transparent.
When voting machines are used, critical parts of the Voting Rights
Act can't be enforced. Under Section 8 of the Voting Rights Act, 42
U.S.Code §1973f, Federal Observers are authorized to observe "...
whether persons who are entitled to vote are being permitted to vote
...(and) whether votes cast by persons entitled to vote are being
properly tabulated..."
Under "Prohibited acts" in §1973i, the "Failure or refusal to permit
casting or tabulation of vote"...can result in civil and criminal
penalties. "No person acting under color of law shall fail or refuse
to permit any person to vote who is entitled to vote...(and)
Whoever...knowingly and willfully falsifies or conceals a material
fact... shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more
than five year, or both."
Voting machines violate those provisions. Vote casting and tabulation
take place inside of a box. Federal Observers can't observe "...
whether persons who are entitled to vote are being permitted to vote
...(and) whether votes cast ...are being properly tabulated.." Voting
machines by their very design "conceals a material fact."
Although, Susan Marie Webber and Congressman Wexler are suing to
force states to require manufacturers to attach ballot printers to
voting machines, the resulting ballot would still be only
circumstantial evidence of the voter’s intent. It's been predicted by
election officials (and it makes common sense, to boot) that many
voters won't bother to verify their ballots. In which case, who is to
say if the vote cast matched the voter's intent? Some will say that
it's the voter's responsibility to verify their ballot, but that view
misses the point. Why should people verify the work of a machine? That
puts the voter playing second fiddle to technology. Whose right to
vote is it?
The contention that voters too often don't fill out ballots properly
or the elections officials too often don't count correctly is not born
out by the facts, but is moot, regardless. Again, the right to vote
and to observe your vote counted properly can belongs to people, not
machines.
Consideration of time and convenience is another red herring in this
debate. Those issues have simple no-tech solutions, anyway. If
officials want a fast ballot count then they can limit the size of the
voting precincts or increase the number of election officials. If more
elections officials are needed they can be drafted into public service
as is done all year around for jury duty. Likewise, voters who don't
understand English could order ballots in their own language in
advance of an election.
Voting machines have been marketed as 'assisting voters' (i.e.,
President Bush's Elections Assistance Committee), rather than what
they really do, which is to interfere with a citizen's right to vote.
It's particularly galling to see the needs of the disabled voters used
to force voting machines down the throats of the electorate. The
simple ballot template, which is used in Rhode Island, Canada, and
around the world, allows the blind to vote privately and
independently, or as independently as possible. Actually, when the
disabled use voting machines they certainly are not voting
independently. They are relying on the machine to vote for them, just
like able-bodied voters.
It's insane when you think about it. Using machines in elections.
Yet, we've been doing it since 1888. How can Americans be so naive?
How can we surrender our precious right to vote to some hunk of junk
and so few people seem to notice or to care? How can we call ourselves
a democracy?
It is painful to think that as African Americans intensified their
struggle for the vote in the 1960's, voting machines were already in
widespread use and perfectly positioned to control election results,
and according to some accounts, were already doing so. Just imagine
how the Iraqi people would react if the U.S. government told them that
their elections will be electronic and that Halliburton, the Carlyle
Group, and Microsoft will provide the machines and the software they
run on? Exactly. The Iraqis would burn the place down, some more.
Yet, here we Americans go again. Not connecting the dots. Shooting at
the wrong target. Attaching printer machines to the voting machines
that don't belong there in the first place. Asking voters to verify a
machine's output, leaving the voter's input indirect and in doubt.
I wonder what the United Nations think about a country that fakes
democracy? They probably already know.
Lynn Landes is one of the nation's leading journalists on voting
technology and democracy issues. Readers can find her articles at
EcoTalk.org. Lynn is a former news reporter for DUTV and commentator
for the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). Contact info:
lynnlandes@xxxxxxxxxxxxx / (215) 629-3553