You go get 'em!
Hope it is not presumptous, but here are a few simple truths and moral principles you may want to add to your arsenal (in case they are not already in there).
(1) We the People have a right to have confidence in the results of our elections.We are the sovereigns here. We the People, through our representatives, have defined election laws to ensure elections that are free and fair and reflect our will. A free and fair election is one in which every citizen has an equal opportunity to cast their vote and have that vote accurately counted. Any rationalization that justifies violation of this right
cannot be tolerated.
(2) Secret Vote Counting is intolerable.Many people, particularly those who are comfortable with technology, miss the key problem with using DREs to record and tabulate votes. Inability to secure the systems against data loss or corruption isn't the core problem. Even is a system guaranteed 100% transaction security, it would still be unacceptable.
The problem is not with the software, the problem is
secret vote counting..
For the electorate to have confidence that they are being afforded free and fair elections that reflect their will, the processes for qualifying to vote, registering, casting votes, tabulating votes, reporting results and verifying results must be
open, understandable, and accessible to every citizen. The guy down the street who dropped out of high school must be able to make sense of the how every aspect of our elections are conducted. (He may or may not bother to find out, but if he does, he needs to be able to make sense of it all for himself. A system that demands that we accept the assurances of experts is fine in commerce or other endeavors, but such a system cannot be tolerated in our elections.)
Not many people on this planet have the expertise required to make sense of computer security, therefore, the role of computers in our elections must be limited. DREs have no place at all.
People reject secret vote counting as a matter of principle. Rejecting DREs as secret vote counters is not much of a stretch.
The fight to have confidence in our elections goes to the heart of who we are as a people. It is a fight that empowers. It is a fight that cannot be limited to the courts or lobbies of Congress. It is a fight that will ultimately be won in conversations over fences, around water coolers and dinner tables.
(3) When election results are called into question, the burden is on the state to prove the results to be accurate.Too often, we get caught up in details of a specific election -- details intended to prove the election invalid. When we do this, we are buying into the illogical assumption that the burden of proof is on us to prove the results invalid.
The burden is NOT on us. Our right to have confidence puts the burden on the state to prove the results to be accurate. It is up to us to put the burden where it belongs.
In our electoral system, when results are called into question, we must presume the suspicious "official" tallies are wrong.
Just as the presumption of innocence in our judicial system minimizes the chances of punishing a defendent for crimes they did not commit, a presumption of bad results minimizes the chances of of putting a candidate into office that was rejected by the electorate.
See
Burden of Proof in an Election.
(4) Disparate treatment alone is sufficient to invalidate an election.Every citizen and leader must answer the following question for themselves: "Are hours-long poll-tax-lines for poor, minority voters AND none for affluent, white voters a tolerable condition for you?"
No rationalization can justify different public and private answers to this question (e.g., "Well, it's intolerable to me, but elections have always had problems.") To tolerate such disparate treatment in an election is to become complicit with the perpetrators of the condition.