who bothered to take the time to go vote (did I read only 23% of eligible voters did? - it might have been even loser)
in a one-race election cast a blank ballot. and this makes sense, no cause for alarm????
The thing I find interesting about this particular case is that it was only Republican candidates involved. Republicans starting to question these machines is really good news, but I'm afraid it may be coming too late to make a difference in time for November.
>"There's definitely something wrong," said attorney Charles Brady, a campaign consultant to Lauderdale-By-The-Sea Mayor Oliver Parker.
Parker finished second to Ellyn Bogdanoff in a seven-candidate race to represent state House District 91, which includes much of coastal Broward County and a tiny portion of Boca Raton. The special election was the only race on Tuesday's ballot.
Employees of Elections Systems & Software, which made the Broward machines, were reviewing precinct-by-precinct results Wednesday. ES&S spokeswoman Becky Vollmer said the 134 "under-votes" -- which were 1.3 percent of all votes cast in Broward County -- were not necessarily a cause for alarm.
"It's certainly not uncommon for voters to cast a blank ballot," Vollmer said.
Brady said he doubts 1.3 percent of Broward voters bothered to show up for a one-race election and then chose not to vote for any candidate.<
link to articleBOCA RATON -- U.S. Rep. Robert Wexler, D-Delray Beach, told
conspiracy-minded Democrats Monday they can't trust the results of the 2004 elections unless new paperless electronic voting machines are outfitted with printers so voters can verify their ballots.
Wexler spoke to about 200 people at a meeting of the Committee to Defeat Bush, a local group whose chairwoman said Republicans stole the 2000 election and "will likely steal it once more" in 2004 by somehow tampering with electronic machines.
>snip<
California's secretary of state last month ordered all the electronic machines there to provide a ballot-by-ballot paper trail by 2006.
Florida Secretary of State Glenda Hood said there is no need for a similar requirement here.The paper-trail issue has been embraced nationally by many Democrats, while Republicans have largely been silent or opposed. Wexler is a cosponsor of a House bill to require voter-verified audit trail with electronic voting. The bill's 94 cosponsors include 91 Democrats and three Republicans. Democratic Sen. Bob Graham introduced an identical bill in the Senate this month.
"It shouldn't be a Democratic or Republican thing, but to a degree it's turned into that," Wexler said.
link to articlenote - my emphases added -
'conspiracy-minded Democrats' - yeah, that's all it is.
on edit:
11% overall turnout link