I don't know if anyone has posted this article by Lynn Landes before (it's below my comments here; please bear with me for a moment as I express my angst).
Are our own voting rights groups doing us a disservice?
As I look at the various bills, I keep feeling like we are putting bandaids on a festering wound. The more I read of Chuck Herrin
chuckherrin.com
and others, the more I don't want voting machines, period. If you haven't read Herrin, you owe it to yourself to check him out. A republican computer security expert, he is one of the most outspoken critics of e-voting. He says there is no way to make e-voting secure.
(And e-voting costs more than any of the other methods, just as an aside here.)
People keep saying we have to accept machine voting; it's here to stay, and we have to do the best we can to make it secure because there is no way we can get acceptance of paper ballots.This article puts a different slant on the issue.
What if we had a massive grassroots effort demanding paper ballots? I am working with a lot of activists in my area, and even though we all want paper ballots nationwide ( I am fortunate to live in Oregon, where we do it the old fashioned way: Paper ballots!) we keep getting told by those in the know that this will never fly, so we reluctantly accept that this is true, and proceed accordingly. Every fiber in my being resists this. Maybe it isn't true. Is it true? Is is only true if we accept that it's true, because we keep getting told that it's true? Read this article and see what you think.
Electronic Voting
Voting rights groups 'block' talk of machine-free elections
By Lynn Landes
Online Journal Contributing Writer
December 17, 2004—So much for a free and fair exchange of ideas. At conferences and hearings across the country, traditional voting rights organizations have successfully blocked any serious debate on machine-free, paper-only elections. It appears that our well-entrenched so-called 'voting rights' organizations, including the NAACP and ACLU, haven't absorbed the lesson from America's election debacles. They would rather invite the industry-funded National Association of State Election Directors (NASED) to speak at their conferences, than invite researchers and activists who will argue that the machines must go.
The Dec. 7 conference in Washington, DC, Voting 2004: A Report to the Nation on America's Election Process, sponsored by Common Cause, The Century Foundation, and LCCR (Leadership Conference on Civil Rights) was no exception. Instead of fighting for the peoples' right to a paper ballot and a hand count, the conference adopted the VerifiedVoting.org and Congressman Rush Holt's (D-NJ) prescription for voting integrity. It is beyond worthless.
It gives people false hope, instead of a sensible solution. Holt's legislation calls for ballot printers and audits. First, that leaves the machines in the voting process—ready, willing, and able to malfunction, break down, or not show up—causing chaos and confusion. Ballot printers won't fix that. Second, it proposes spot audits, which leaves the counting of ballots in the hands of the very election officials who prove with each new election how truly inept or completely evil they really are. And third, the only time paper ballots will be counted is in case of a "close" election, ensuring that perpetrators of vote fraud will steal a sufficient number of votes to avoid triggering a recount.
At the conference, I privately asked Rep.Holt about the shortcomings to his legislation. He looked like a deer caught in the headlights. When I asked what happens when the machines malfunction (ballot printers and all), Holt said something about "emergency ballots". When I asked what "emergency ballots" were, he said that it's up to the states. It was obvious that he is not accustomed to tough questions. That's strange, I thought. I've been communicating with Michele Moulder of Holt's staff for the past two years. So how could he be so unprepared to defend his legislation?
More
http://www.onlinejournal.com/evoting/121704Landes/121704landes.html