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1. In at least some states, even the paper absentee ballot is converted into an electronic ballot, then counted with the rest of the electronic ballots. So, it could have dubious advantages over a polling place ballot. Bev Harris has also found out that in at least some jurisdictions, the absentees are farmed out to a private contractor to handle. I'm sure that makes you really feel secure, right?
2. I confess, I haven't plowed through the Help America Vote Act. But, according to Senator Ensign from Nevada, a law he helped write REQUIRES paper. There are a number of interpretations of it, however.
Regardless, the verbiage sounds clear enough to me -- the paper ballots that protesters turn in should include the verbiage from the law, eh? Quote chapter and verse from federal law.
Amendment, Voting Rights Act Amendment No. 2900 to the Equal Voting Rights Act of 2001: “The voting system shall produce a permanent paper record with a manual audit capacity for such system. “The voting system shall provide the voter with an opportunity to change the ballot or correct any error before the permanent paper record is produced. “The printed record shall be available as an official record for any recount conducted with respect to any election for Federal office in which the system is used.”
Ensign says voting machine debate moot
RENO GAZETTE-JOURNAL 12/5/2003 12:11 am Susan Voyles svoyles@rgj.com
While people in Nevada and across the country debate whether electronic voting machines should produce a duplicate paper ballot, U.S. Sen. John Ensign said federal law already requires it. But some including Secretary of State Dean Heller disputed Ensign’s interpretation of the law, saying it allows individual states to decide whether paper ballots are needed.
Ensign said Thursday that his amendment to the Equal Protection of Voting Rights Act of 2001 requires a permanent paper record be available as the official record for any vote recount. It also must give a voter the opportunity to change the ballot or correct an error before the paper record is produced.
“There’s nothing more important than having a valid ballot box,” said Ensign, a Republican, who lost a race to U.S. Sen. Harry Reid in 1998 by 428 votes.
In that race, Ensign requested a recount of the paper ballots used in Washoe County after it was determined paper ballots had been misprinted and scanning machines had misread some of them for the count.
Ensign said he will never be certain about the vote in Clark County because it was all done electronically.
“For electronic machines, you push a button and the question comes out with the same count over and over. No one knows whether there is a flaw in the system. Everyone has to ask themselves whether their computer at home has ever malfunctioned.”
The minutes of the Senate hearing clearly state his intent: The purpose is to provide for a system that “permits voters to verify their vote at the time it is cast and used as the official record for recounts.”
But Heller said he interprets the law differently.
The bill went to a conference committee of the Senate and the House, and U.S. Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., the bill sponsor, said on the Senate floor that there was no intent for the paper record to serve as the official record. “That’s left to each secretary of state,” he said.
And that’s the way federal elections officials now interpret the law, said Heller, who wants Washoe County to use new electronic machines for the 2004 election.
But Heller conceded a new Federal Elections Assistance Commission, created by voting rights act, will have the final say.
And U.S. Rep. Rush Holt, D-N.J., has introduced a bill that will produce “the voter verified paper trail.” It now has 74 sponsors. The voters’ rights movement, however, gained steam in late November when California Secretary of State Kevin Shelley ordered county officials to use voting machines with paper ballots by 2006. <snip>
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