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Edited on Sun Dec-07-03 08:01 PM by Skinner
Tallahassee.com
Sun, Dec. 07, 2003 How secure will votes be? Lack of a paper trail in 2004 election concerns some By Nancy Cook Lauer DEMOCRAT CAPITOL BUREAU CHIEF
When playwright Tom Stoppard said "It's not the voting that's democracy; it's the counting," he had no idea how his words would resonate in Florida and across the nation almost three decades later.
Counts, recounts, canvassing boards and lawsuits took center stage after the 2000 presidential election. As a result, Election Day 2004 is sure to be one of the most scrutinized ever.
And now, with the advent of electronic ballots for more than half of Florida's voting populace, a new controversy has surfaced - the security and verifiability of votes cast using machines that leave no paper trail.
A divided electorate
Elections officials always fear a close election, but 2004 promises to be just that. Florida remains the most partisan of the competitive large states in the nation, with its 9.4 million registered voters evenly divided as of Sept. 30 with 42 percent Democrats, 39 percent Republicans, 17 percent with no party affiliation and 3 percent minor parties.
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