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www.blackboxvoting.org
Report from Washington D.C.
1/5/2005 Midnight EST: Bev Harris was in D.C. today, together with representatives from auditthevote.org and Help America Recount. After meetings in John Conyers' office and meeting with other staffers, we can offer the following "heads up" for tomorrow:
Whether or not senators stand with Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich) to challenge electoral college votes, do not expect the action to flip the presidency. This is a dose of truth which may be unwelcome to some, but comes directly from the mouths of key congressional staffers. Indeed, Rep. Conyers himself does not expect his bold action to flip the presidency. The votes just aren't there.
Challenging the electoral college will serve instead to create public awareness of current problems with election integrity. If joined by at least one senator -- and more than one senator ARE likely to join -- the challenges will serve to open a 2-hour debate, likely split 50-50 between Republicans and Democrats, and this will produce awareness of problems that can enhance the chances of getting corrective legislation passed.
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Will more states be involved, or just Ohio? It will only be Ohio, despite outstanding work done by Lowell Finley and his team on New Mexico, and issues in several Florida counties. It has been deemed too complex, by congressional representatives, to tackle more than Ohio.
One concern: The challenge will likely seek to frame the problem largely in terms of vote suppression and punch card systems which will soon be obsolete. Though we were assured that a mention would be made of problems in Lucas County, Ohio -- which uses Diebold optical scans -- and we also received assurance that vulnerabilities with remote access to central tabulators would be addressed, it seems likely that there will be an attempt to corral the discussion so that it does not tackle issues with modern voting machines. If public awareness is concentrated on suppression and punch cards, very thorny and dismally real problems with integrity of touch-screen and opti-scan systems will remain.
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