It's another nightmare scenario.
In a Florida district this election, 18,000 people declined to cast a vote in a congressional race but voted in other contests on the same ballot. That was four or five times the number of "no votes" than in other elections, raising alarms about Florida's electronic voting machines.
In the race, Republican Vern Buchanan has been declared the winner over his Democratic challenger, Christine Jennings. Buchanan won by 369 votes out of 238,000 cast, state officials said, but there is no paper trail to verify what happened to those 18,000 "no votes." Oh, and by the way, Buchanan and Jennings were running to replace Republican Rep. Katherine Harris, who was Florida's secretary of state during the 2000 election debacle and vacated her seat to run for U.S. Senate.
Could this happen here? What is wrong with those people? Should Florida just be eliminated as a state? Now, U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein wants to answer at least one of those questions and take a hard look at electronic voting machines when the new Congress convenes.
In California, little-known to the general public, election officials have been auditing their electronic voting machines, as required by law, after the November election. Each county must compare the voting machine results from 1% of precincts to the voter-verified paper trail that the machine produced.
With all the squawking about the dangers of voting machines , a remarkably small number of people have been attending these public audits and observing the process. In some counties, nobody shows up while election officials verify the accuracy of the machines. But Kim Alexander with the California Voter Foundation, which fought to require a voter-verified paper trail in the state, and Stanford professor David Dill, who founded Verified Voting, have observed some interesting things while watching the audits over the past few days:
Ordinary people can call their county elections office to see about watching e-voting audits that haven't been finished yet. Alexander has a tip sheet for observing.
For the most part, alarm bells are not ringing about California's auditing process, but look for legislation next year to reform the process and additional scrutiny from incoming Secretary of State Debra Bowen. "I've gained a lot of respect," Dill said, "about how complicated it is to do good auditing."
(Photos: George Clark / AP; Joshua Roberts / Gettty Images)