Here on the eve of the scheduled meeting of Ohio's Presidential Electors, I'm amazed that a very curious feature of voting in Ohio has gotten so little publicity.
Maybe that's because it has no catchy name. You'e heard the expression, "Give it a name!" In this post, I call it "the Caterpillar Ballot", because, at the same polling place, a valid vote for John Kerry (or any other candidate) might have to go in ANY OF FIVE DIFFERENT LINES ON THE BALLOT. Kerry's name climbs from ballot line to ballot line, just like a caterpillar moving from twig to twig on a tree. The Cleveland Plain Dealer explained it all in an article (EXCERPTED BELOW) that remains obscure. Here's my explanation, which may or may not be clearer to you:
Let's say Precinct 33 has Kerry on line 3, Precinct 34 has Kerry on line 4, Precinct 35 has Kerry on line 5, Precinct 36 has Kerry on line 6, and Precinct 37 has kerry on line 37. Friday's Cleveland Plain Dealer says, "Voters from multiple precincts typically share a polling place."
Let's say that Precincts 33, 34, 35, 36, and 37 are assigned to vote together in one huge school gymnasium. Everything will be fine as long as voters from each precinct use only the punch machines set up for that precinct's candidate order.
But if the pollling place is crowded and chaotic (as hundreds of polling places were on Election Day, when it rained hard all day all over Ohio), a Precinct 33 voter might take her ballot to a Precinct 34 machine. She'd punch a hole where it says "Kerry", on Line 4. But a stamp on the back of her ballot would route it to a counting machine where a Kerry vote must be on Line 3. If she took it to another precinct's machine, she'd cast a Kerry vote on another line, but still not on line 3, where it would have to be, to be counted for Kerry.
Do you see the problem? Kerry's name moves like a caterpillar from one ballot line to another, depending on which machine is used in a room full of machines set up for different precincts.
Just like the "Butterfly Ballot" that made Palm Beach County famous in the 2000 Florida fiasco, the Ohio Caterpillar Ballot has great potential for mischief. And it is the most straghtforward explanation I've heard for the incredibly large vote totals minor candidates got in Ohio. People
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From
http://www.cleveland.com/news/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/cuyahoga/1102674912293811.xml"Friday, December 10, 2004
"The stage for the mix-ups was set by a state law that requires candidates' names be rotated on ballots so that each candidate gets a turn at the top position. The rotation is done in the name of fair play, a nod to conventional wisdom that undecided voters tend to choose the name at the top.
In Cuyahoga County, where punch-card voting machines are used, the names are rotated on the pages in voting books that guide voters to the proper position on the punch cards. THERE WERE FIVE VERSIONS OF THE PAGE FOR THE PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES.
The first version lists the candidates' names alphabetically... In each subsequent version, the candidate at the top of the list moves to the bottom, bumping the rest up one notch. VOTERS FROM MULTIPLE PRECINCTS TYPICALLY SHARE A POLLING PLACE. Candidates' names in voting books are rotated by precinct, so there are different versions at the same polling place.
Voters are supposed to use polling booths, and the voting books in them, that are specific to their precinct, not just any booth in the polling place. The problem comes when a punch-card ballot for one precinct is inserted in the voting device for another precinct. Because of the name rotation, a voter unknowingly punches a hole for the wrong candidate.
THE PUNCH CARDS THAT VOTERS SLIDE INTO THE DEVICE ARE THE SAME, BUT THEIR BACKS ARE STAMPED WITH THE PRECINCT SO THEY WILL BE COUNTED PROPERLY."