Modern Ballot Box Stuffing: Can We Trust Team Bush?
By Marjorie Cohn
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Friday 06 August 2004
Democracy requires consent of the governed.
Consent is measured by the results of fair and free elections. The
midwives of our democracy were the founders who made the Revolution, and
the leaders of the Civil Rights Movement that gave birth to The Voting
Rights Act of 1964.
As we approach the November presidential
election, the media treats us to daily updates on the razor-thin margin
between the candidates as measured by the polls. The issues that divide
Bush from Kerry are parsed in print and on television. We debate the state
of the economy, the growing deficit, job loss, terrorism, and the War on
Iraq.
Our conversations assume that voters, guided by
the differences between the candidates on the issues, will go to the polls
and cast their votes freely and fairly.
Casting a pall over that assumption, however,
is the memory of Florida 2000, where 537 votes separated Bush from Gore. A
confluence of factors led to the anointing of Bush as President.
A black vote in Florida was 50 percent more
likely to be "spoiled"- and thus not counted - than a white
vote, according to the U.S. Civil Rights Commission.
"Florida's 2000 felon purge program
resulted in over 50,000 legal voters being disenfranchised," said Ion
Sancho, Supervisor of Elections for Leon County in Florida.
And then there were the five members of the
Supreme Court who diverged from their traditional deference to
"states' rights" by second-guessing the Florida courts. The
conservative justices who handed the election to Bush became one-time
champions of "equal protection of the laws" when they stopped
the recounting of ballots.
The horrors of hanging and dimpled chads led
many to sing the praises of electronic balloting. One of the corporations
that manufactures touch-screen voting machines is Diebold Election
Systems. Its chief executive, Walden O'Dell, told Republicans in an August
14, 2003 fundraising letter that he is "committed to helping Ohio
deliver its electoral votes to the president next year." As the state
of Ohio will be pivotal in the upcoming election, O'Dell's statement
galvanized Democrats to demand a "paper trail" for all votes.
Thanks to the efforts of organizations such as MoveOn.Org,
TrueMajority, VerifiedVoting.org,
and ACT, all votes cast in Ohio in November will now have a paper trail.
But Election Data Services estimates that
nearly 30 percent of voters in the presidential election will not vote in
systems that produce paper to be used if a recount becomes necessary.
David Dill, Professor of Computer Science at
Stanford University and founder of VerifiedVoting.org, has no evidence of
a conspiracy to fix the election. But, he told me, "We know people
would steal elections if they get the chance, and it wouldn't be hard to
steal." The easiest way to commit fraud, according to Dill, would be
by an insider at the company, a programmer who makes a hidden change to
the software. With the current procedures, he said, there's "not a
ghost of a chance" the culprit would be caught.
Nearly 100 million of the 115 million votes
cast in November will be tabulated by computers owned by four private
corporations. Besides O'Dell's Diebold, Election Systems and Software,
Sequoia Voting Systems, and Hart InterCivic will count 5 out of 6 of the
votes. Tom Hicks, one of Hart's principal investors, has close financial
ties with Bush.
Dill says, "It is not sufficient for an
election to be accurate - the public has to know it's accurate."
After Senator Max Cleland, the odds-on favorite to win reelection in
Georgia in 2002, was defeated, 1 in 8 voters were "not very
confident" or "not at all confident" that touch-screen
voting machines had produced accurate results. Thirty-two percent were
only "somewhat confident.”
Professor Dill advocates transparency in the
process. People should watch, and audit trails must exist. With electronic
voting, we can't see inside the machine. Dill admits that paper ballots
result in fraud as well, but we can see them; they're transparent. He's
worried about a system that's vulnerable to theft. Professor Dill endorses
the optical scan system, which electronically scans the vote, and creates
a paper backup.
In both the 2002 general election and the March
2004 presidential primary in Florida, there was a higher percentage of
undervotes in counties that used touch-screen machines than in those using
optical scanners. Undervotes occur when a voter apparently fails to make
any choice at all. Moreover, nearly all the electronic records - 8 percent
of the vote - from the 2002 primary in Miami-Dade County have been lost,
leaving no audit trail. Voters using the touch-screen machines were 6
times as likely to record no votes as those in counties using optical scan
machines. This suggests the possibility that intended votes were not
recorded for some reason.
There is a bill pending in the House of
Representatives that would require a voter-verified permanent record or
hardcopy of every vote cast. H.R. 2239 has 150 co-sponsors. Dill maintains
it is possible to provide paper backup for all votes cast in November, but
thinks it "extremely unlikely," as the bill is bottled up in
committee. He does predict it might pass with an amendment requiring
compliance by 2006. A similar bill by Bob Graham and Hillary Clinton, and
co-sponsored by seven Democrats and one Independent, is pending in the
Senate.
A June editorial in The New York Times decried
the foibles of electronic voting machines, which, it claimed, are less
secure than slot machines: "Voting machine standards are out of date
and inadequate. Machines are still tested with standards from 2002 that
have gaping security holes. Nevertheless, election officials have rushed
to spend hundreds of millions of dollars to buy them.”
An additional cause for concern is the wrongful
disenfranchisement of ex-felons. Republicans planning another mass purge
in Florida were caught with their pants down when a judge forced them to
reveal that Hispanics - who notoriously vote Republican there - were
excluded from the purge. (With Bush's latest anti-Cuba travel ban
alienating many Florida Cubans, however, all bets are off on their votes).
Ion Sancho is alarmed at the lack of data to
support the accuracy of Florida's new felon purge list database for 2004:
"As the Supervisor of Elections for Leon County," Sancho said,
"I will not be party to any effort, program or activity which may
deny the voting rights of our citizens. I am outraged that our State
officials, in an apparent pursuit of some imaginary voting fraud problem,
are once again pursuing an ill-conceived program which may once again lead
to the disenfranchisement of thousands of Floridians.”
In 2000, Florida denied the vote to 6 percent
of its voting age citizens, 16 percent of its black voting age citizens,
and 31 percent of its black citizen voting age men.
California attorney John R. Cosgrove argues in
a new article in the Thomas Jefferson Law Review that the
disenfranchisement of ex-felons in many states violates the Constitution.
The Fourteenth Amendment carves out an exception to the Equal Protection
Clause - intended to promote black male suffrage - for men who have
committed a crime. Cosgrove maintains that this provision only excludes
from voting those men who have committed crimes that were felonies at
common law. Drug crimes, for example, are not common law crimes. He also
notes there is no legal basis to disenfranchise female ex-felons.
The "Protect American Voters Act of 2004,
"with 29 co-sponsors, is pending in the House of Representatives. It
would require States to provide notice and an opportunity for review prior
to removing any individual from the official list of eligible voters by
reason of criminal conviction or mental incapacity.
It all boils down to trust. When Bush told us
he was a "compassionate conservative," he said: trust me. When
he assured us he would pursue a "humble foreign policy" with no
"nation-building," he said: trust me. When Bush said Iraq was an
imminent threat to us, he said: trust me. When he reassured us that the
torture of prisoners was the work of but a few bad apples, he said: trust
me. And most recently, when he raised the terror alert based on years-old
intelligence data, he said: trust me.
Can we really trust this man, who has
consistently lied to us about the most important matters of national
security, not to engage in dirty tricks in the November election?
With many still smarting from the 2000 election
stolen by George W. Bush, some have taken to quoting Joseph Stalin, who
said: "Those who cast the votes decide nothing. Those who count the
votes decide everything." But Professor Dill, the voting rights
champion, cautions against pessimism that would lead people to sit out the
election. Even if the only option is touch screen voting without a paper
trail, says Dill, "don't stay away from the polls." Our lives
depend on it.
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