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Holt bill voted out of committee

Baby steps. Who knows if and when this thing will get to the floor, but you have to celebrate even small victories. The bill that was just passed out of the House Administration Committee would allow states that choose to upgrade their voting machines to ones that have a paper trail to use money made available under the Help America Vote Act, which was passed in the wake of the 2000 Florida debacle. As we all know, there are some pretty sketchy voting machines out there, and some states are having buyers remorse after rushing to replace their antiquated lever systems.

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Tags: election reform, paper ballots, paper trail, DREs, voting, voting machines (all tags)

Democracy Shouldn't Come With a Price Tag or a Timetable

Yesterday the Senate Rules and Administration Committee held a hearing to receive testimony on S. 1487, the Ballot Integrity Act. So what's good about the bill? It includes a requirement for DRE voting machines to have a voter verified paper trail. In the event of a recount, the paper trail is considered to be the official ballot. What's bad about the bill? It doesn't require DRE's to have voter verified paper records until 2010 - two full years after the next Presidential and Congressional election.

Click "Read More" for the rest...
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Tags: elections, election reform, electronic voting machines, paper ballot, paper trail, Get It Straight by 2008 (all tags)

The fight for paper ballots isn't over

The headline of a front-page story in today's New York Times - entitled "Overhaul Plan for Vote System Will Be Delayed" - is somewhat misleading.

Negotiations are still under way to pass a bill by Rep. Rush Holt (D-NJ), the Voter Confidence and Increased Accessibility Act (HR 811), which would require electronic voting machines to produce a voter-verifiable paper record of their vote. Holt and House Speaker Pelosi are doing their best to bring the bill to the floor for a House vote, despite mounting resistance from state and local election officials who complain the implementation timelines in the bill are too short.

We will continue to support Holt and Pelosi in those efforts, and are encouraged that talk is still happening. We will keep working tirelessly toward a resolution and are hopeful it will take place.

It is also essential that Congress recognize that we cannot go through one more national election in which the mechanics of our democracy - our voting systems - are not as secure as they can be, and that voters are not confident that their ballots will be counted as cast.

How do we try and bring democracy to Iraq when we cannot even get our own voting systems working securely?

We can't.

In the last three elections we have seen repeatedly paperless electronic voting machines malfunction and lose votes. American voters have called loudly for secure reliable elections, and that is what we will continue to fight for.

Stay tuned - we are far from finished.

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Tags: Election Reform, paper ballot, paper trail, Rush Holt, HR 811 (all tags)

FL-13: House task force votes to investigate

From CQ:

A House task force will investigate allegations that voting machine errors contributed to the razor-thin victory by Republican Vern Buchanan in Florida's 13th Congressional District.

By voice vote, the three-member House Administration Committee task force agreed to launch a formal investigation.  They also agrees to use GAO experts to design a reliability test for the voting machines in question.

As expected, there's disagreement:

Republicans on the full committee, including Vernon J. Ehlers of Michigan, the ranking minority member, have argued that Congress should defer to the Florida court system. Democrats said such deference is not necessary.

"It's not a precedential requirement that we wait forever for the courts to act," said Democrat Zoe Lofgren of California, one of the members of the task force, which is headed by Democrat Charlie Gonzalez of Texas.

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Tags: FL-13, Christine Jennings, Vern Buchanan, Florida, election reform, paper trail, paper ballot, electronic voting machines (all tags)

Maryland about to Strike Out Again?

The Maryland Senate has effectively quashed a bill that would have required voting machines to produce a paper record. A similar bill passed the House but the Senate bill was voted back to committee.

House bill sponsor Sheila Hixson was very disappointed, as are the many advocates who've been working on this issue for years in Maryland. Here's an excerpt from the report in the Baltimore Sun:
"This is obviously a ploy to kill any hope of getting it done in time for an election," said Del. Sheila E. Hixson, the Montgomery County Democrat who sponsored a House version of the bill. The measure mandated that the paper records be kept at polling places at a cost of $17 million to the state for fiscal year 2008 and $1.5 million for fiscal year 2009.

The Senate bill had dropped the requirement for audits, a piece of the "paper trail" legislation that Common Cause and many other voting reform groups feel is essential.

If a companion bill to Hixson's isn't acted upon in the next two weeks, Maryland will face the 2008 elections with the same issues as previous elections. Last year a similar bill passed the House and had the support of then-Governor Ehrlich but died in the Senate. Election supervisor Linda Lamone, a long-time vocal opponent of paper records, must have some good friends in the Senate, along with her pals at Diebold.

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Tags: voting machines, election reform, Maryland, In the States, paper trail, paper ballot (all tags)

Avi Rubin on Holt bill

Here's another piece on the Holt bill, from Avi Rubin, who has as much cred as anyone on the subject:

Earlier this month, US Congressman Rush Holt (D, NJ) introduced H.R. 811, a bill to amend the Help America Vote Act of 2002 to require a voter-verified paper ballot. I have read the bill, as well as some of the criticism by various activists.

In my opinion, passage of the Holt bill would be the single most positive development in this country this decade to ensure the security, integrity and verifiability of elections. As a federal law, this legislation would establish a baseline for all states that would exceed the security and audit of elections in most states today. The bill is well thought out. It addresses the issues of audit, security, privacy, recounts, conflicts of interest, testing, certification, and cost.

I was personally privy to discussions on these issues as the text for the bill was being drafted, and I believe that the reason that this bill handles all of these difficult issues so well is that the Holt staffers took their time, acted deliberately, and consulted with the top experts, until they got it right.

The primary criticism from a subset of the activists is that the bill does not go far enough. For example, it does not ban DREs, as long as they are equipped with a voter verified paper record that is not kept in sequential order. Personally, I would support a ban on all DREs, with paper trails or without. However, the lack of such a ban does not detract from the fact that the Holt bill as it reads would do more to improve election integrity, security and audit than anything that anybody else is doing.

Similarly, when I read the NIST report about software independence (SI), and the resulting recommendation that legacy systems be allowed, and that only future systems will require SI, I would have preferred that all non-SI systems be immediately decertified. But, the net result of that report was positive and will ultimately lead to better elections in this country.

As we move forward, it is important to constantly improve our elections. I believe that the Holt bill has the potential to take the biggest step this country can take towards the ultimate goal of minimizing fraud and error, while increasing access, confidence, and thus, hopefully, participation in public elections in the United States.

Click here for Avi's blog.

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Tags: Holt, Rubin, paper trail, voting machines, Congress (all tags)

More on Holt bill intro

I am posting this for my colleague, Susannah Goodman, who's been deeply involved in work on the introduction of Rep. Holt's new bill, HR 811:

I wanted folks to know that we've been reading your posts and are very grateful that you all are monitoring this process so closely and blowing the whistle when you see fit.   We read them all.  They've been great.  We are working actively with Members of Congress and their staff to have the best possible federal legislation.  They are tired of us bugging them with all kinds of language change suggestions - many of them yours - but that's our job and we'll continue to do it.  And we're working with other advocacy groups to help us push for these changes as well.  We won't get everything we ask for but we will get some of it.

That said, we very much support HR 811.  Look. Reality check here.   There are still 15 states out there with paperless DREs.  No paper. No Nothing.  That's 15  too many.  It only takes one of those states to throw a presidential election.  We NEED these machines to produce paper ballots.  Only 12 states conduct any kind of audit.  With the exception of Connecticut,  all of these states have audits which are weaker than the requirements in the Holt bill.    We NEED audits in all 50 states.   We also NEED emergency ballots in every polling location so that when (not if) machines break voters can still vote.   We NEED durable paper ballots so that they can be used in recounts and audits.  

So we need this bill.  But it has a very long list of enemies. From  voting system  vendors -- to Secretaries of State who don't ever want the feds to tell them what to do or how to do it --  to underfunded overburdened county officials who want to know just "where we think they're going to get the staff and money to implement all these changes."    And what these folks say really resonates on Capitol hill.  In other words, this bill is not a done deal.  We NEED Speaker Pelosi and Majority Leader Hoyer to champion this bill and move it quickly.  And we will NEED all your help in pushing for this bill and for the funding for this bill. 

So that's where we are.  Please keep your comments coming.

General News :: Entry Link :: 2 Comments
Tags: Holt, voting machines, paper trail, Congress (all tags)

"Making Democracy Credible"

I just wanted to quickly let everyone know that the New York Times today has an editorial in praise of Sen. Feinstein's work in the Senate to require all electronic voting machines to produce a voter-verifiable paper ballot.  The headline sums up the heart of the paper ballot movement - "Making Democracy Credible."

It is good news that Ms. Feinstein has called for the federal investigations -- and that she is pushing a bill to require paper trails nationally. As long as there are no paper records, and voting machine manufacturers continue to insist that the software that runs the machines is a "trade secret," voters cannot be expected to trust that votes are being counted correctly. The leadership in Congress needs to focus on making sure that Ms. Feinstein's paper-trail bill becomes law, along with a companion House measure from Rush Holt, Democrat of New Jersey.

The editorial contains some other turns of phrase that I particularly like, such as:

Click "Read More" for the rest...
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Tags: elections, paper ballot, voting machines, electronic voting machines, paper trail, Dianne Feinstein, Rush Holt, Christine Jennings, Florida, New York Times (all tags)


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