The Voting News for June 9, 2011
The Voting News for June 9, 2011
Wisconsin:
Senators Holperin, Hansen and Wirch headed for Wisconsin
recall election | Wausau Daily Herald
All three
Democratic state senators targeted for recalls will have to
stand for election this summer after the board that oversees
elections declined on Wednesday to invalidate petitions
circulated against them, even though it found evidence of
fraud.
The Government Accountability Board voted to
reject thousands of signatures it determined were either
fraudulent or collected by circulators through misleading
means, such as saying the petition was for something other
than recalling the Democrats.
But even after those
signatures were tossed, more than enough remained to force
recall elections for Sens. Jim Holperin of Conover, Dave
Hansen of Green Bay and Bob Wirch of Pleasant Prairie.
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Editorials,
North Carolina: Big voter turnouts and perceptions of fraud
| NewsObserver.com
Since North Carolina Republicans
introduced a Voter ID bill in February that would require
all citizens to show a photo ID before voting, one thing has
become crystal clear. State efforts are part of a nationwide
drive to tighten rules on voting. In the past two months no
less than 13 state legislatures, all of them controlled by
Republicans, have advanced Voter ID legislation.
Sponsors
in North Carolina and elsewhere claim showing driver's
licenses or a similar card will eliminate voter fraud and,
as the North Carolina bill is named, "Restore Confidence in
Government." Democrats have countered that there has been no
wave of election fraud that needs fixing. Instead, they
insist, Republicans are trying to make it harder for the
elderly, the poor and the transient - those who often lack
driver's licenses - to vote. They compare the measure to
historic poll taxes that once disfranchised thousands of
North Carolinians.
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National:
Organisation appeals for expat Americans to stand up and be
counted | Telegraph
The Overseas Vote Foundation
(OVF), a not-for-profit group dedicated to helping Americans
overseas take part in federal elections, began its
“Counting Citizens” project in April this year.
Using
the power of social media to spread the word, the group is
appealing for expats to register on a dedicated website, and
help the organisation produce a reliable estimate of the
number of Americans currently living abroad
“At the
moment, there no is no accurate up-to-date estimate of how
many American citizens abroad there are or where they
are,” said Susan Dzieduszycka-Suinat, the president of the
OVF. “Expats are not included in the US census, and
previous estimates have been very rough, and often
non-official.
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Texas:
So Many Elections, So Little Time | The Austin
Chronicle
And now for some completely different
election news: A seemingly innocuous Texas Senate bill,
passed and awaiting the governor's signature, may
drastically affect Austin's local elections, even extending
the terms of the mayor and three City Council members by six
months.
Senate Bill 100, legislation from San Antonio Dem
Leticia Van de Putte, was drafted to bring the state in line
with federal law requiring that federal ballots be delivered
to military and overseas voters at least 45 days before an
election. It preserves Texas' current March primary date,
while postponing potential primary run-offs to the fourth
Tuesday in May, so as to meet the 45-day requirement.
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Blogs,
National: New Research Result: Bubble Forms Not So Anonymous
— Princeton researchers deanonymize optical scan ballots|
Freedom to Tinker
by Will Clarkson Today, Joe
Calandrino, Ed Felten and I are releasing a new result
regarding the anonymity of fill-in-the-bubble forms. These
forms, popular for their use with standardized tests,
require respondents to select answer choices by filling in a
corresponding bubble. Contradicting a widespread implicit
assumption, we show that individuals create distinctive
marks on these forms, allowing use of the marks as a
biometric. Using a sample of 92 surveys, we show that an
individual's markings enable unique re-identification within
the sample set more than half of the time. The potential
impact of this work is as diverse as use of the forms
themselves, ranging from cheating detection on standardized
tests to identifying the individuals behind “anonymous”
surveys or election ballots.
If you've taken a
standardized test or voted in a recent election, you’ve
likely used a bubble form. Filling in a bubble doesn't
provide much room for inadvertent variation. As a result,
the marks on these forms superficially appear to be largely
identical, and minor differences may look random and not
replicable. Nevertheless, our work suggests that individuals
may complete bubbles in a sufficiently distinctive and
consistent manner to allow re-identification.
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New
Jersey: Technical glitch shakes up Sussex County New Jersey
election results — Sequoia Advantage DREs | New Jersey
Herald
Past Cinderella’s curfew and beyond the
target deadline for the Sussex County Board of Elections, a
small gathering including Freeholder Rich Vohden, freeholder
candidate Dennis Mudrick, acting County Clerk Jeffrey
Parrott, Sheriff Michael Strada and two of Franklin Mayor
Paul Crowley’s children waited for results of the Tuesday
primary election. The unofficial results that never
came.
Numbers appeared to be coming in smoothly for the
first half of the evening. However, as charts displaying
unofficial results flashed on the wall via a projector,
watchers noticed the number of reporting districts changed,
and not always in an upwards direction. According to the
results, the number of districts reporting numbers were
decreasing, and the number of Walpack votes totaled 61,
though only 22 registered voters reside in the
community.
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New
Jersey: Troublesome voting machine cartridge from East
Hanover New Jersey likely to decide Morris freeholder race
— Sequoia Advantage DRE | dailyrecord.com
A vote
cartridge from East Hanover that is expected to be read
today may reveal whether Republican Freeholder incumbent
Margaret Nordstrom or challenger William "Hank" Lyon won the
primary nomination Tuesday night.
As of this morning
Lyon, a resident of the Towaco section of Montville who
works for his familys restaurant business, Qdoba Mexican
Grill, had a six-vote lead over Nordstrom, a freeholder
since 1999.
The unofficial tallies are Lyon with 12,234
votes and Nordstrom with 12, 228 votes. But one vote
cartridge in East Hanover could not be read last night so
county election officials today got a court order from
Superior Court Assignment Judge Thomas Weisenbeck to have
the cartridge removed from the voting machine and brought to
the Morris County Clerks office where it will be read and
recorded by witnesses.
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New
Jersey: East Hanover voting results delayed by technical
difficulties — Sequoia Advantage DRE |
NJ.com
Unofficial results for primary races in the
Morris County township were delayed due to technical
difficulties.
"The machine jammed, we won't have results
until tomorrow," said Theresa Maggiulli, the township
registrar. Maggiulli explained that there was a problem with
one of the 16 voting machines in the township.
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North
Carolina: Voter ID bill given initial OK on North Carolina
House floor | NewsTimes
The Republican-led North
Carolina House late Wednesday muscled through legislation
requiring voters to show photo identification before casting
an in-person ballot, despite Democratic accusations the bill
is a voter suppression measure designed to boost GOP
political fortunes.
By a vote of 67-50, the House gave
tentative approval to the voter ID restrictions just before
midnight at the close of a marathon day in which General
Assembly members considered scores of bills as a
self-imposed procedural deadline late Thursday approached.
The party-line vote, however, appears to keep Republicans a
few votes short of overcoming any potential veto by
Democratic Gov. Beverly Perdue.
The measure received
about 10 minutes of debate for the first of two required
votes before the new day began. House Speaker Thom Tillis,
R-Mecklenburg, pledged a longer discussion later Thursday on
the divisive bill.
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North
Carolina: House’s final decision on North Carolina voter
ID bill could come Thursday | Sun Journal
Just a few
moments before the stroke of midnight Wednesday, the state
House gave its tentative approval to a bill requiring North
Carolina voters to produce a government-approved photo ID to
cast their ballots.
The Republican majority limited
debate on the bill, entitled “Restore Confidence in
Government,” to a brief explanation by bill sponsor Rep.
David Lewis, R-Harnett, and short comments by Minority
Leader Joe Hackney, D-Orange, and Majority Leader Paul
“Skip” Stam, R-Wake.
A final vote on the bill could
come on Thursday. House Speaker Thom Tillis, R-Mecklenburg,
said that House members would be allowed to debate the bill
fully at that time.
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Minnesota:
Rep. Ryan Winkler Speaks Out Against Voter ID Proposal |
Golden Valley, MN Patch
Rep. Ryan Winkler (DFL-Golden
Valley) Tuesday challenged Republican representatives’
plan to put a constitutional amendment requiring voter photo
identification on the ballot after Gov. Mark Dayton vetoed
the measure.
“Older women, students, the disabled,
battered women are just a few of the groups that would be
harmed by the constitutional amendment that Republicans are
proposing today,” Winkler said at a news conference
Tuesday.
Winkler said Republicans argued they are trying
to stop voter fraud, but that voter fraud is not an issue in
Minnesota. He also said requiring a photo ID would not
prevent felons from voting.
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Pennsylvania:
Boockvar wins Pennsylvania court Democratic primary | 21
News
A statewide recount for a Commonwealth Court
seat is over, and Doylestown lawyer Kathryn Boockvar is the
winner in the Democratic primary. The Department of State
announced Wednesday that Boockvar won by a little more than
2,000 votes out of 621,000 cast.
The results show
Boockvar defeated Pittsburgh lawyer Barbara Behrend
Ernsberger by nearly the same margin that was reported in
unofficial results shortly after the primary.
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Editorials,
Maine: Maine Voices: Legislature should not revoke
Mainers’ voting rights | The Portland Press
Herald
The Maine House and Senate are poised to limit
the most fundamental democratic process -- voting. L.D.
1376, "An Act To Preserve the Integrity of the Voter
Registration and Election Process," will eliminate Maine's
nearly 40-year tradition of Election Day registration. It is
a very bad deal for Maine voters. Election Day registration
means that voters can register and vote on the same day. It
works well.
Eliminating Election Day registration will
disenfranchise the thousands of Maine citizens who rely on
it. And to what end? There have been only two cases of voter
fraud prosecuted in Maine in 30 years. In addition to
Maine's tradition of election integrity, we have a tradition
of vibrant civic engagement. In fact, Maine has one of the
highest rates of voter participation in the country.
This
move will turn back the clock on our democracy. It will turn
back the clock on voting rights.
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Nevada:
Special election court hearing set in Nevada |
ReviewJournal.com
The Nevada Supreme Court on June 28
will hear oral arguments on whether the special election to
fill Dean Heller's seat in Congress will be a free-for-all
or be limited to candidates chosen by party central
committees.
The court announced Wednesday that it has
scheduled an hourlong hearing in the case of the Nevada
Republican Party versus the Nevada Democratic Party. Each
side will have 30 minutes to make its case. Thirty people
already have signed up for the tentative Sept. 13 election
for the 2nd Congressional District.
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Nevada:
Supreme Court to hear argument on special election law
before ballot deadline | The Republic
The Nevada
Supreme Court is preparing to review a lawsuit challenging a
special election law before the July 6 deadline to get the
candidates on the ballot. The court said Wednesday the full
bench will hear from the state and the major political
parties on June 28 in Carson City.
The court has been
asked to decide whether the state's first election to fill a
vacant House seat will be open to all major party candidates
or just candidates chosen by party leaders.
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Nevada:
Cherchio will seek recount in North Las Vegas race |
ReviewJournal.com
After losing an election by a
single vote in Tuesday's tightest race, Richard Cherchio
said a recount is almost a no-brainer. "We need to know
everybody's vote was counted properly," said Cherchio,
incumbent North Las Vegas City Councilman for Ward
4.
Dentist Wade Wagner defeated Cherchio, who was
appointed to the seat in 2009, by a tally of 1,831 votes to
1,830. Because the race was so close, Cherchio wasn't ready
to concede.
"We're going to look at all the ballots," he
said.
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Estonia:
How Estonians became pioneering cyberdefenders |
CSMonitor.com
Ahead of spring elections, Agu
Kivimägi was tasked with trying to ensure that online
voting in Estonia wasn't vulnerable to attack. Its
pioneering system of casting national ballots via the
Internet would be a hacker's prize target.
After the
ballots were counted, returning Estonia's center-right
government to power, e-voting escaped assault – or any
technical difficulties, for that matter. Mr. Kivimägi, who
oversees computer security for Estonia's Interior
department, is part of the world's first volunteer
cyberarmy, deployed this year to help ward off hacker
strikes and defend against online warfare.
Made up of
Estonia’s best information technology (IT) minds, from
programmers to lawyers, the 150-member Cyber
Defense League is Estonia’s cyber national guard.
Should Estonia come under attack, they would deploy under
the command of the National
Defense League, a volunteer force created to safeguard
the country's security and independence.
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Thailand:
Thailand cracks down on beastly “no vote” billboards |
Monsters and Critics
Thai election authorities
Thursday ordered the removal of 'no vote' posters in Bangkok
depicting politicians as monkeys, buffaloes, dogs, tigers
and crocodiles.
Election Commission chairman Apichart
Sukhakhanond said the billboards, put up by the People's
Alliance for Democracy (PAD) movement, had to be removed
because they were larger than regulation size. 'I don't want
to get into the details,' Apichart told reporters.
On
Wednesday, the commission had voted that the billboards were
election-related, even though the PAD is not competing in
the July 3 polls, and it had the authority to decide on
their removal.
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Thailand:
People’s Alliance for Democracy roars over Thai billboard
ban
People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) will seek a
court injunction blocking the removal of billboards with
"animal" politicians, its spokesman Panthep Pourpongpan said
today.
The PAD's legal team was checking pertinent
provisions before petitioning either the Central
Administrative Court or the Civil Court to launch an
emergency inquiry into the issue.
The PAD is furious
following the Election Commission (EC)'s ruling on Wednesday
to ban the "No" vote and animal-headed politicians
billboards introduced by the PAD, saying these violated
election laws. Its commissioners voted 4-1 to have the "No"
vote billboards removed for violating the electoral law and
the cleanliness ordinance.
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Tunisia:
Constituent Assembly Election In Tunisia Put Off |
rttnews.com
Tunisia's first election following the
ouster of its long-serving President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali
in January last has been put off by three months, reports
said on Wednesday. Consequently polls for electing the
country's new Constituent Assembly will now be held on
October 23.
Announcing the postponement, Interim Prime
Minister Beji Caid Essebsi said the Electoral Commission had
asked for time-out ostensibly for resolving technical
problems.
He said there were several Tunisians who had
reservations on delaying elections. Even the interim
government had been initially reluctant but it nonetheless
wanted polls to take place in a transparent manner.
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Bangladesh:
Samyabadi Dal says yes, Janata League no to electronic
voting in Bangladesh | The Daily Star
Bangladesher
Samyabadi Dal ML yesterday supported introduction of
electronic voting e-voting system in upcoming general
election while Krishak Sramik Janata League opposed it
saying the system is not enough to prevent vote
rigging.
Leaders of the two parties expressed their
opinions in seperate dialogues with Election Commission EC
at its secretariat in the city as part of its ongoing
dialogue with 38 registered political parties till July
14.
EC launched the dialogues on Tuesday for opinions on
key issues like use of e-voting machine; Representation of
the People Order; laws on demarcation of constituencies and
appointment of election commissioners. Both parties stressed
on the need for establishing a free and powerful EC to
conduct a neutral election.
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Bulgaria:
Bulgarian Rightist MEP Denounces Kuneva Presidential Bid as
‘Abstract’ | Novinite.com
The presidential
nomination of former EU Commissioner is amorphous, according
to Bulgarian EPP MEP Nadezhda Mihaylova-Neynsky.
In a
publication in 24 Hours daily, she levels criticism at the
newly announced presidential bid and at the governmental
practices introduced by former Tsar and Prime Minister
Simeon Saxe-Coburg and current Prime Minister Boyko
Borisov.
Before her term in office as an EU Commissioner
in charge of consumer protection, Meglena Kuneva was an MP
from the National Movement for Stability and Prosperity
(NSMP), a party formed by Saxe-Coburg.
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