Calculation 2006: Are the Voting Machines Doing Their Job?

By Scott M. Fulton, III | Published November 7, 2006, 4:21 PM

UPDATED November 7, 2006 3:50 pm ET

12:00 pm ET As morning ended on Election Day in the US, voting precincts throughout the country are, as expected, reporting sporadic problems with newly installed electronic voting equipment. There are no outright disasters reported just yet, though heavier-than-normal turnout for a mid-term election may be increasing pressure on volunteers to make certain systems work flawlessly.

This morning in Indiana’s Marion and Delaware counties, which include Indianapolis, a single computer error was blamed for holdups in as many as 75 of the state’s 914 precincts. An apparent erroneous program caused voting to be delayed for several hours. In a total 100 precincts in Marion county alone, touch-screen voting equipment could not be started up, and time was spent converting booths to standby paper ballots. As a result, polls here will remain open until 8:40 pm ET.

My own home district is Marion County, where this morning I voted using the traditional paper ballot, after the premiere of touch-screen equipment was scrapped. There were no delays.

In St. Louis, where the Missouri US Senate race is historically tight, the largest newspaper has asked citizens to report voting irregularities – or the lack of them – to an online forum. There, at least one voter reported of a suburban polling station whose electronic equipment could not be booted, forcing the precinct to resort to paper ballots.

But many voters there are reporting the electronic equipment they used there is running smoothly. As one fellow commented at 11:00 am ET, his precinct gave voters the choice of touch-screens or paper ballots. He chose the electronic method, and may have been the first voter that morning to do so. While the equipment worked flawlessly, he said, his voting inspectors were in a panic, apparently waiting for something to break.

In Baltimore, in a state where the election was thrown into turmoil two years ago on account of malfunctioning Diebold systems, volunteers and officials reported a very smooth morning on historically high turnout. One precinct reported electronic voting machines were not working, on account of missing power cords. But as the Baltimore Sun quotes a deputy state elections administrator as saying this morning, “Here or there, there are issues, but nothing like the last time.”

The most recent Sun poll showed the state’s incumbent governor, Bob Ehrlich, having narrowed his re-election deficit against Democrat challenger, Martin O’Malley, to just one percentage point. Ehrlich is a vocal critic of the state’s all-electronic voting system, but lacks the authority to remove election officials who were appointed by his predecessor, who helped install that equipment. If the election outcome mirrors the latest polls, his supporters may lose some sleep for at least several days.

In eastern Arkansas, the Crittenden County clerk’s office reported electronic voting machines that failed to boot, forcing precincts to resort to paper balloting. Election officials in that state estimate that as much as 20% of the eligible electorate may already have voted using “early ballots,” which is a system Arkansas and other states now use to encompass absentee ballots, as well as voters who are present but simply don’t want to risk touching screens.

In Memphis, Tennessee, Democrat US Senate candidate Harold Ford, Jr. –- whose deficit against Republican Bob Corker has narrowed to about 3 percentage points in major polls -– complained early this morning of voting machines that have failed to start throughout the city. Ford’s office is already leveling one challenge, he said, on behalf of voters who were dismissed from their precincts until later in the day when problems could be resolved.

From Riverside County, California, the Secretary of State’s office received word there that machines manufactured by Sequoia Voting Systems may contain a non-so-secret little yellow button, ostensibly for diagnostic purposes, but which could potentially enable any voter to “enter administrator mode,” if you will, and vote multiple times.

3:30 pm ET A reporter for the Palm Beach, Florida Post reports personally witnessing voting machine irregularity in her own local precinct. An election worker was apparently explaining to voters needing help with the touch screens that they may be especially sensitive, and that you had to press a certain way. During the demonstration, though, voters could plainly see the screen recording a “Yes” on a referendum issue as a “No” vote. The reporter did not go on to say whether the vote accidentally counted.

In Virginia, where Sen. George Allen (R) faces a strong challenge from Democrat Jim Webb, news sources report extraordinarily heavy turnout – as much as double the levels of the mid-term elections four years ago. When all the votes are tallied, as much as 65% of the registered electorate may have voted, which would be double the 2002 turnout.

Part of that huge number may be accountable to increased use of absentee ballots, which experts partly attribute to fear and distrust of electronic voting machines. The Richmond Times-Dispatch reports a 50% increase in absentee ballots returned from the number cast for the 2003 gubernatorial race.

3:50 pm ET In Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, it’s the paper ballot-counting machines that were malfunctioning. A full 57 of the county’s 275 eScan machines were malfunctioning, half of which, an election official tells the local paper, are accountable to simple paper jamming. The county’s eSlate machines, however – with the touch screen – are reportedly working well. A judge there has declared the polls may remain open until 9 pm ET.

In Houston’s Fort Bend County this morning, the start of voting to replace outgoing Rep. Tom DeLay was delayed for two hours, as at least two precincts discovered they were delivered voting machines that belonged to each other. Votes were apparently actually cast before someone noticed that he was voting for people he shouldn’t have been voting for.

Comments

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Voting machines are only a part of the problem.

When you have groups like ACORN which has been involved in voter registration fiascoes, such as the fake registrations in Kansas City and elsewhere, it is hard to pick away at voting devices.

We need voting reform at the Federal level that provides a valid and credible certification system for voting devices and methods used - ranging from registration of voters to voting data. In a country where recent elections have been close within fractions of a percentage point we need a voting integrity process that provides severe penalties for violators at all levels. It seems amazing that we have the technology to put exploration vehicles on Mars, validate our credit and banking transactions and test our DNA, yet we can not secure the integrity of our voting system. If we ran our elections half as tight as we supervise casino operators in this country we would have a move forward.

I'm not b****ing, but I would much rather see strict processes in place before voting then deal with this trend of wailing and fighting about hundreds of potential voting discrepancies every friggen time we go to the polls. I think American taxpayers and voters deserve the right to have a higher level of trust in the voting system and less second guessing.

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Notice its only considered voter fraud when the democrats lose.

B1tch & Complain -- thats what the liberals do best.

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Very sad state of affairs. Problem very wide spread. Are re-counts even possible? No paper trail either.

A log on issues can be found here:
http://www.votersunite.org/electionproblems.asp

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The last 2 elections were rigged. Especially the last one. The buddies of GWB are are strategically placed to give us the illusion of a democratic election.
The main electronic voting machines manufacturers that America uses, are Diebold and ES&S which ironically are controlled by two brothers that are very heavy supporters of the Republican party.

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Actually Hugo Chavez, a neo-commies Left Wing Democrats friend, owns some of the companies behind the voting machines...
You Democrats are the ones to believe so smart that no one would notice when you are cheating.
Counter-attacking your cheats and tricks is just a reaction, you are the ones committing frauds everywhere every single time.

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oh shut up already.

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you are a member of the NSDPA aren't you? That is the National Socialist Democratic Party of America. The NSDPA PUSHED to get these Macines in after the 2000 election and now they are claiming the same "voter fraud" the claimed then (and in your "rigged" election of 2004). The only thing rigged about the elections in this country is the NSDPA attitude that if you don't vote for them them you are somehow psychologically impaired. They protest every election they lose, reminds me of NSDAP (that is National Socialist Deutsch Abeiter Party or Nazi Party for you that are historically impaired) Germany in 1934.

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back at you, NSDPA hack

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LOL! Yeah okay, we'll just all forget about Diebold and Wally O'Dell. Nice try.

The fact of the matter is that electronic voting can and should be verified by a paper trail, something most states, red or blue, are demanding and will get. When they don't get it, they are blocking the company's machines from being used in their state.

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Yes, the LAST ONE was rigged... (nov 7, 2006)... but we don't biitch and complain. I am FOR the electronic voting machines. Its about time govt entered the 21st century.

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How can any IT experienced person even ask a question as in the headings - ?! - !?

Go and look what's going on in the rest of the world - a fool who never sticks his head out of his homeyard:

http://www.wijvertrouwen...mputersniet.nl/Nedap-en

Then you'll know that even the thought of using voting machines is anti-democratic and destroying the very basis of democracy. And don't run around saying: "Oh, if I'd ever known . . ." Ignorance won't help you, anyway.

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