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Editorial See other Editorial Articles Title: When Votes Disappear You know what really had me terrified on Nov. 7? The all-too-real possibility of a highly suspect result. What would we have done if the Republicans had held on to the House by a narrow margin, but circumstantial evidence strongly suggested that a combination of vote suppression and defective or rigged electronic voting machines made the difference? Fortunately, it wasnt a close election. But the fact that our electoral system worked well enough to register an overwhelming Democratic landslide doesnt mean that things are O.K. There were many problems with voting in this election and in at least one Congressional race, the evidence strongly suggests that paperless voting machines failed to count thousands of votes, and that the disappearance of these votes delivered the race to the wrong candidate. Heres the background: Floridas 13th Congressional District is currently represented by Katherine Harris, who as Floridas secretary of state during the 2000 recount famously acted as a partisan Republican rather than a fair referee. This year Ms. Harris didnt run for re-election, making an unsuccessful bid for the Senate instead. But according to the official vote count, the Republicans held on to her seat, with Vern Buchanan, the G.O.P. candidate, narrowly defeating Christine Jennings, the Democrat. The problem is that the official vote count isnt credible. In much of the 13th District, the voting pattern looks normal. But in Sarasota County, which used touch-screen voting machines made by Election Systems and Software, almost 18,000 voters nearly 15 percent of those who cast ballots using the machines supposedly failed to vote for either candidate in the hotly contested Congressional race. That compares with undervote rates ranging from 2.2 to 5.3 percent in neighboring counties. Reporting by The Herald-Tribune of Sarasota, which interviewed hundreds of voters who called the paper to report problems at the polls, strongly suggests that the huge apparent undervote was caused by bugs in the ES&S software. About a third of those interviewed by the paper reported that they couldnt even find the Congressional race on the screen. This could conceivably have been the result of bad ballot design, but many of them insisted that they looked hard for the race. Moreover, more than 60 percent of those interviewed by The Herald-Tribune reported that they did cast a vote in the Congressional race but that this vote didnt show up on the ballot summary page they were shown at the end of the voting process. If there were bugs in the software, the odds are that they threw the election to the wrong candidate. An Orlando Sentinel examination of other votes cast by those who supposedly failed to cast a vote in the Congressional race shows that they strongly favored Democrats, and Mr. Buchanan won the official count by only 369 votes. The fact that Mr. Buchanan won a recount that is, a recount of the votes the machines happened to record means nothing. Although state officials have certified Mr. Buchanan as the victor, theyve promised an audit of the voting machines. But dont get your hopes up: as in 2000, state election officials arent even trying to look impartial. To oversee the audit, the state has chosen as its independent expert Prof. Alec Yasinsac of Florida State University a Republican partisan who made an appearance on the steps of the Florida Supreme Court during the 2000 recount battle wearing a Bush Won sign. Ms. Jennings has now filed suit with the same court, demanding a new election. She deserves one. But for the nation as a whole, the important thing isnt who gets seated to represent Floridas 13th District. Its whether the voting disaster there leads to legislation requiring voter verification and a paper trail. And I have to say that the omens arent good. Ive been shocked at how little national attention the mess in Sarasota has received. Here we have as clear a demonstration as were ever likely to see that warnings from computer scientists about the dangers of paperless electronic voting are valid and most Americans probably havent even heard about it. As far as I can tell, the reason Florida-13 hasnt become a major national story is that neither control of Congress nor control of the White House is on the line. But do we have to wait for a constitutional crisis to realize that were in danger of becoming a digital-age banana republic?
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#2. To: Minerva, lodwick, bluedogtxn, christine (#0)
I refuse to believe Kinky Friedman running for Tx Gov only received 10% of the vote. He had way too much support..unless his supporters failed to vote, which I doubt seriously. I thought it rather convenient that the 1st time in recent history that TX had a viable independent candidate, was also the 1st year we got EVoting machines.
#3. To: IndieTX (#2)
People like Bush and Katherine Harris only like elections if they can control the results without the people knowing they were ripped off. Which is why a revolution in this country could very well happen sooner then people think.
you can bet your life on it.
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