Snopes Confirms Danger Of Straight Ticket Voting
This is an action alert. If you know anyone in the following 15 states: Alabama, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Texas, Utah, West Virginia, or Wisconsin, make sure to pass this on to them. Early voting has already begun. This affects millions of voters. Thank you.
Joan Brunwasser, Election Integrity Editor, OpEdNews
OpEdNews Original Content at http://www.opednews.com/articles/Snopes-warns-of-dangers-of-by-Joan-Brunwasser-081020-116.html
Snopes confirms danger of Straight Ticket
Voting (STV)
Most of us have run across Snopes in its 13-year history. It has become the most well-known website to investigate urban legends, rumors, and myths. On numerous occasions, I have been saved from passing on unsubstantiated claims by a timely look at Snopes.
This weekend, I got an email from my brother, John. He was passing along something that he had received from a friend. It was Snopes' validation of citizens' concerns about STV – Straight Ticket Voting.
Having sounded the alarm for years about the perils of electronic voting, I was thrilled that such a well-respected source chose to deal with even one aspect of this subject. As far as I know, this is Snopes' first foray into election issues.
Before I overreacted, though, I wanted to check out the specifics included in the Snopes report. I sent the link around to various people in the election integrity movement and got a clear consensus that, while Snopes' article was a great attention-grabber, the VotersUnite! article by Ellen Theisen is superior, offering more detail and is ultimately more useful.
I spoke with Ellen this morning. She pointed out that votes get lost in every election, for a variety of reasons, including straight ticket voting. It is impossible to know exactly which ones, where, or even how many are lost or changed. Just today, an article in the Houston Chronicle tells of early voters who voted a Democratic STV and saw their presidential vote flip to John McCain.
Ellen has talked to numerous
election officials across the country. She was struck by
how many of them weren't quite sure themselves of their
particular state's rules regarding STV. So, here are three
ways for a potential mix-up:
The officials may not
provide the correct information to the voter, the voter
might not execute the vote properly (either because of not
understanding what was said or because of confusion over the
use of the voting apparatus) or the programmer might have
goofed it up. Also, the way STV works in one state may be
completely different than the way it works in the state
right next door. Because of these reasons, Ellen sees STV as
"one more layer of opportunity for an electronic miscount".
Even if you familiarize yourself with all the ins and outs
of your state's requirements, there is still too much risk
of something going wrong if you vote STV.
Ten second
take-away
Ellen went to a tremendous amount of
trouble to gather the information for the fifteen states
that use STV. It is provided at the VotersUnite!
website. Nevertheless, her advice would be: avoid
using STV. Vote for each and every race individually, even
if it takes a little longer. This is a clear case of more
convenient not being better. Avoid Straight Ticket
Voting!
Who's affected
Here are the fifteen
states that offer STV (sometimes known as SPV, straight
party voting). Alabama, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan,
New Mexico, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode
Island, South Carolina, Texas, Utah, West Virginia and
Wisconsin. If you add up the population in those states,
you're at around 90 million. So, we're talking about tens
of millions of voters including those from four of the ten
most populous states. It is quite likely that all of us
have contacts in at least one of the fifteen states. Since
early voting has already started, it's critical to get this
information out to as many people as possible as quickly as
possible. Millions of votes could be at stake.
Of course, if you were to say that this should be the job of the Election Assistance Commission, you would be 100% correct. The EAC was created by the Help America Vote Act in 2002, to be a national clearinghouse for election information. They have fallen far short of the mark up until now; it is unlikely that they will suddenly drop everything to sound the alarm about this. On the other hand, this is a perfect opportunity for us to step in.
In making this information widely known and urging people to avoid STV, we can make a difference!
~~
Many thanks to Ellen
Theisen for her help!
Authors Bio: Joan Brunwasser is a co-founder of Citizens for Election Reform (CER) which exists for the sole purpose of raising the public awareness of the critical need for election reform. We aim to restore fair, accurate, transparent, secure elections where votes are cast in private and counted in public. Electronic (computerized) voting systems are simply antithetical to democratic principles.
CER set up a lending library to achieve the widespread distribution of the DVD Invisible Ballots: A temptation for electronic vote fraud. Within eighteen months, the project had distributed over 3200 copies across the country and beyond. CER now concentrates on group showings, OpEd pieces, articles, reviews, interviews, discussion sessions, networking, conferences, anything that promotes awareness of this critical problem. Joan has been Election Integrity Editor for OpEdNews since December, 2005.