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Edited on Sun Jan-31-10 12:47 AM by Bill Bored
1. Dems want to be able to rig elections too, esp. their own primaries. In many heavily partisan jurisdictions, whoever wins the dominant party's primary also wins the general election. This is true for Dems as well as Repubs. Dems need to suppress there own insurgent candidates who might interfere with their DLC Republican-Lite corporate agenda, or otherwise move the party too far to the populist left. So they need to ensure victory for certain candidates and defeat for others. In places like Georgia this can also be done by allowing Republicans to vote in Dem primaries, but in states without open primaries, it has to be done with vote switching.
2. Many Dems support paper ballots, but usually only if counted by computers. There may be some truth to the charge that Dems are looking after the interests of trial lawyers who happen to specialize in elections. They want to litigate over paper ballots -- not count them. If election results were too clear cut, there would be no opportunity for such litigation, and hence no money to be made off it. This may also be why Dems don't support or even acknowledge the need for proper audits of elections. If there were strong evidence of who really won and lost elections, it could weaken the case for litigation. The problem is, this is a deal with the devil. Courts may not see things the Dems' way, and recounts may not be allowed without evidence of miscounted votes. But the lawyers would probably get paid either way, so what do they care?
Ever notice how many laws are written by lawyers? ;)
That said, I also agree with Gary's point that elections are like a sausage factory to most folks, including even the candidates. They haven't got a clue how their votes are being counted (or miscounted) and their attitude is it's someone else's problem. This applies to so-called "good government" groups as well as folks who are less politically engaged.
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