Voting Machine Makers Wine and Dine Officials
Voting Machine Manufacturers Wine and Dine Election Officials
CHELLIE PINGREE, [via Mary Boyle]
mboyle@CommonCause.org, www.commoncause.org/
Chellie
Pingree is the president of Common Cause. She said today:
"Last week, a four-day conference for election officials was
held, co-sponsored by voting machine vendors who want their
business. The conference was organized by the Election
Center, a non-profit organization that describes itself as
an association of election and voter registration officials,
which is a central source of information for United States
election officials and related government agencies. In
March, it was revealed that the Election Center, which
trains election officials and advises Congress and
government agencies on election process issues, has taken
large donations from manufacturers of electronic voting
machines -- even as it has issued strong statements
supporting the security of the machines."
She added: "The plans for the event included women in evening dresses and men in tuxedos carrying a six foot-long check made out to 'election officials' for 'parties, cruises, wining and dining' and signed by voting machine manufacturers Diebold Elections System, Sequoia Voting Systems and Elections Systems and Software. R. Doug Lewis, the center's executive director, confirmed that the organization had received donations from Sequoia, Elections Systems & Software, and Diebold. Diebold sponsored the welcome reception, while Sequoia took the conferees out on a Potomac River dinner cruise and ES&S sponsored the graduation luncheon and awards ceremony. As election day approaches amid serious concerns that our nation's voting system has not been fixed since the debacle in 2000, the spectacle of elections officials sailing down the Potomac on a dinner cruise sponsored by voting machine vendors sends the wrong message to voters."
FREDDIE OAKLEY, oakley@dcn.org,
www.yoloelections.org
Freddie Oakley is the County Clerk
Recorder in Yolo County, California. She said today: "There
is a long history of close and congenial relationships
between the people who conduct elections and the businesses
that supply them with materials and technology. In part,
this is inevitable because it's a small community. However,
as a matter of conduct with regard to the public trust,
election officials need to be increasingly aware that the
scrutiny of the public and the press shines a bright light
and that they should probably retreat from the long-time
practices of accepting cocktails and dinners from the people
they do business with."
She added: "I have been distressed for a long time that the Election Center, which holds itself out as the impartial association for election officials, engages in and appears to encourage this kind of industry subsidy of get-togethers of election officials. As elected public officials, we should have an arms-length relationship with these businesses. Elections officials should not partake of sponsored entertainment. Regardless of whether or not any impropriety actually takes place, avoiding the appearance of improprieties should be paramount to the members of the election community."
GREG PALAST,
media@gregpalast.com, www.gregpalast.com
Palast is author
of the New York Times best-selling book The Best Democracy
Money Can Buy, an expanded election edition of which has
just been released. Formerly a professor of statistics, he
is analyzing vote machine manipulations for BBC television
and a forthcoming Harper's article titled "Money Poisoning
of the Decision to Choose Computers Over Cheaper, More
Reliable Methods of Counting Ballots." He said today:
"Politicians who have fallen in love with computer voting
machines find their affection well-rewarded. The head of
the National Association of Secretaries of State is a big
booster of computers by ES&S and Sequoia ... and they boost
her ... as two of her top ten campaign contributors. For
ES&S, it's 'all in the family': they hired the husband of
the Supervisor of Elections in Pinellas, Florida, and the
husband of the state legislator representing Broward County,
the place where non-operating ES&S machines failed in
African-American precincts. The company obtained
multi-million dollar contracts against the recommendation of
the state's panel of experts. Computers in Florida this
year experienced a 600 percent higher 'spoilage' (error)
rate than paper ballots read by scanners ... but the
computer manufacturers are winning the cash-for-favors race
hands down."
For more information, contact at the
Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202)
347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167