The First One’s Free
…then you pay
Washington, D.C.
Where did all these electronic voting machines come from anyway? They produce nothing but controversy. You can’t see
where your vote goes. You can’t watch the votes being counted. Even if you could, it’s all done by computer. Have you
ever watched a computer do anything?
Our voting machines come from a bipartisan bill produced by the Congress with strong White House support: the Help
America Vote Act of 2002 (HAVA). It was going to solve the problems of Florida 2000.
What were those problems? It depends on who you ask. If it’s the White House, the bill supporters, and the media spin
machine, there was a big controversy because of hanging chads. The White House and Congress were so proud of themselves that they made this solution available free to the whole country.
If you ask anyone who studied the situation, the few hundred vote count difference the chads created didn’t amount to
much compared to the pre election and Election Day travesties in Florida 2000 which threw out over 150,000 votes, mostly
for Gore.
First there was the exclusion of qualified voters by the Florida Secretary of State. Pre election, at least 57,000
Florida voters were taken off the voting rolls because they were supposedly “felons.” They were not. Half were minority
voters, predominantly black Floridians. Black turnout in Florida was over 70%. You do the math. That’s a big Gore
victory.
Second, there was the rejection of 150,000 spoiled ballots. Every federal election cycle, a few million votes are just tossed because they’re spoiled (allegedly
unreadable). This happens at a much higher rate in minority precincts. A careful research study concluded that a combination of factors predicted high rates of spoiled ballots in Florida 2000. The mix was a large
minority population, mostly black, in a county governed by a Republican board of supervisors. Florida’s 150,000 rejected
ballots in 2000, accounted for 7.8% of the national total of 1.9 million.
So what did the White House and Congress do? They passed the Help America Vote Act of 2002 (HAVA). That was about helping those two million disenfranchised voters get their votes counted right?
Wrong! It was about solving the problems of hanging chads on punch card ballots. They must have missed the finding in
the Ft. Lauderdale Sun Sentinel (1 Dec 2000) showing that the Florida chad problems could have been solved if Miami-Dade
and other counties had just cleaned the tablets on which punch cards were marked.
FREE VOTING MACHINES… here, have one, it’s free.
When the president signed HAVA it had a special clause that made it irresistible. The voting equipment was free. What a
deal! Congress promised and delivered on billions of dollars for the purchase of electronic voting machines. Free at
first! Few complained.
All the states and counties had to do was go along with the act and its main goals. The Election Assistance Commission, steward of HAVA, states the goals:
Replace punch card voting systems
To establish the Election Assistance Commission…
To establish minimum election administration standards for … Federal elections.
The initial authorization for HAVA funding was $3.8 billion dollars. $2.4 million had been disbursed just in time for the 2004 fiasco. Digital
cash inducements continue but with strings attached. The Holt Bill, H.R. 811, will amend and add more than a billion
dollars for new systems to help America vote..
A new bureaucracy was born – HAVA compliance. The money wasn’t really free; but you knew that. By taking the money, counties had to
promise to obey new federal regulations.
These called for centralized registration databases in all the states. This expanded the opportunity to efficiently
purge legitimate voters from Florida to all the states.
HAVA provided another opportunity to deny votes. It supported voter identification laws. These laws attempt to solve the
patently fake problem of voter fraud (unregistered individual voters, poor & minority, lined up to vote). Average convictions and guilty pleas averaged six a year, hardly a crime wave, not even
close to a justification.
So much for solving the real problems of Florida 2000.
Hidden Costs Emerge Quickly
There are some very unhappy customers in counties all across the country. It seems electronic voting is not free
forever, just at the start. Once you’re hooked, there are all sorts of additional costs. A study by Suffolk County, New
York summarized the problem:
"There exists a myriad of additional components which would need to be considered when addressing the cost of adopting
an electronic voting system, including but not limited to software products, service rates, optional accessories (such
as a voter-verified paper audit trail), training fees, ...audio preparation fees, cartage, storage, maintenance,
technical support, and voter education."
Salt Lake City, for example, found out that election costs have soared under the helping hand of HAVA.
The Salt Lake City Council is ready to bite the bullet and pay three times more for its municipal election than it has
in previous years. The extra costs are mainly because the new electronic voting machines require more training for poll
workers at higher wages. The machines are also in short-supply, which could mean fewer polling locations… KCPW News 11 July 2007
What a bargain! You pay more and you get fewer precincts. Good thing there’s no competition in the voting business. The
government would be finished.
Riverside Count, California one of the first locales to adopt touch screen electronic voting saw its elections budget
soar. There were performance and security questions as recently as the 2006 elections. The San Diego Union reported on July 17 that “According to the (blue ribbon) committee's report, the county should phase out electronic
voting in favor of ‘a hybrid voting system whereby able-bodied voters mark their preferences on paper ballots which are
then counted by optical scanners.’”
So billions of dollars later, botched election after election, and the loss of confidence in the entire system, what do
we have?
The Real Costs of Helping America Vote
Computerized voting is secret. Your county election official can’t look inside the machine or examine the basic computer code. That’s in their contract with Diebold, ESS, etc. Even if they could, most would
lack the expertise to understand and judge operations and security features.
.
Verifying votes is either impossible or faith based. The touch screen systems fail to produce a real audit trail. When
they do, all you get is a paper receipt. This may or may not reflect the way the touch screen counted your vote. Optical
scanners, which count voter marked paper forms, are computerized tabulators. These have digital memory records of votes
( the real ballots by law). We don’t get access to that. It’s private, manufacturers only. We’re told, “Move along.”
But the real cost of computerized voting is to the process formerly known as democracy. Since we don’t know how the
machines truly operate and there are no real ballots to recount, there’s no way elected officials can actually
demonstrate that they were elected. There have been many questionable elections since 2000. The quick response by the winner has been sore loser or spoiled sport. That’s not only a dishonest response; it’s had its day with the public. Americans have very negative attitudes toward
electronic voting.
Electronic voting has stripped elected officials of the ability verify their own elections (even if they wanted to). It
failed to address the real problems of Florida 2000 and the nation
Were all these losses worth a few less than reliable, highly corruptible voting machines from third or fourth tiered
technology companies?
If they can’t show that they were elected, do we have to obey?
ENDS
Permission to reprint in part or in whole provided with a link to this article in “Scoop” and attribution of authorship.