This is VIVA 2005, introduced by Senator Ensign. (It's co-sponsored by Democratic Minority Leader Harry Reid.)
Has a number now. S. 330
Call the US Capitol Switchboard:
(202) 224-3121 and ask to speak to your Senator. After that, call and ask to speak to your OTHER Senator. The whole exercise will take less than 5 minutes.
Ask them to co-sponsor the bill.
Here's why it's the best bill of the lot right now. (It's not the final answer, but it's a good start.)
Voting, and having everyone's vote count, is the bedrock of our democracy. If it doesn't work, we are in deep trouble.
Right now, 30% of Americans vote with electronic voting equipment that has no independent paper record. Thus, in the event of a problem and a recount, there is nothing to check -- all the machine can do is REPRINT the same information. If the machine got it wrong (and hundreds of them did, documented, in November 2004), the mistake may not be corrected, or they may have to run the election again. (In Carteret County NC officials are STILL arguing about a November election in which the machine lost several thousand votes, and the law will probably force them to run the election again.)
Without a paper record that the voter verifies while they vote, flaws or fraud can go undetected. The losing candidate may seem to get more votes, and take office. In one analysis of the 2000 presidential election, a flip of just one vote per voting machine across the country could have changed dozens of electoral votes. In Ohio in November 2004, flipping just 14 votes per precinct, in HALF the precincts in Ohio, would have reversed the declared winner, and Kerry would have won Ohio. So, small errors or vote manipulations can result in big differences.
VIVA 2005 will require that:
<> Voters be able to verify the accuracy of their ballot "in a private and independent manner" by allowing the voter to review an individual paper version of the "voter's ballot" before the "voter's ballot" is cast and counted.
<> All electronic records produced by any voting system will be consistent with the paper records.
<> In the event of any inconsistencies or irregularities between any electronic records and paper records, the voter verified paper record is considered the true and correct record of the votes cast.
<> The paper ballots be used as the official record for the purpose of any recount or audit, conducted with respect to any election for Federal Office.
The bill is tightly focused and strong, addressing these points only. The provisions will take effect as if they had been included in the enactment of the Help America Vote Act of 2002, that is, in time for the 2006 general election.
For more up-to-date analysis of the various bills, you can go to
http://www.verifiedvoting.org/article.php?list=type&type=43One can argue for Holt's reintroduced bill.
One can hope Conyers' bill's faults get fixed.
One can hope Dodd's bill gets thrown in the trash.
One can WAIT for Hillary's bill to show up, rather than a plea for petition signatures with no text for the bill anywhere to be found.
But while we're waiting for all that, please give a :kick: to Ensign's bill.