• Home
  • US Politics
  • Business & Economy
  • UK & Welsh Politics
  • Reflections On...
  • Video Archive
US Politics

Voting Transparency: Through The Looking Glass of Technological Ballot Boxes

Posted on 23 December 2008 by Denis Campbell

 

(reprise article) By Denis Campbell

Throughout the primaries we heard, “it’s 8:00 pm in the east, polls have closed, CNN can now declare with 1% of the ballots counted, Senator Barack Obama is the winner of the South Carolina Primary.”

99% accuracy. How did they know? Exit polling is part of it. But polling places, early voting and questionable technology speed results to a salivating media, despite proven flaws and security holes big enough to drive a monster truck through.

The problem is, a potentially racist, lying Veep candidate is more exciting than real news or issues that require thinking and then mobilisation. Most just do not want think about ballot security.

The Tucson (Arizona) Citizen, (subject city of my previous articles on vote fraud), wrote this week: 

“Local activists sometimes seem overly excited by the merest hint of errors in election procedures. Be grateful that they do. With a pivotal presidential election in only 45 days, citizens and officials should welcome every effort to ensure ballot integrity in Pima County and nationwide. The most persnickety of people’s concerns must be resolved to ensure accurate vote counts and to renew public confidence in our system.”

How do we fix the ‘illusion’ of Ballot security in a divided, distrustful, partisan and polarised electorate to bring transparency to and faith in the system? We go back to the future. Paper is once again king!

Vi Nethino was town clerk of Avon, Massachusetts for 30-years. Vi knew everyone and took her job very seriously. When you arrived at our polling station, neighbours were there supervising. Confidence was high as you placed your paper ballot envelope upside down on top of the box and the man turned the lever producing a tiny bell’s ‘ding.’ You were sure your vote had been cast and would later be correctly counted.

Today, voting is more about speed than getting it right. Most officials bury their head in fear we will lose confidence. Those wanting to speak do not because of the British term ‘jobsworth’… it’s not worth losing my job over.

One who spoke was California Secretary of State Deborah Bowen. She commissioned a university study after security complaints in their $450 million dollars worth of new touch screen voting machines. The study found serious security flaws in voting systems created by Diebold, Sequoia, ES&S and Hart InterCivic. All failed her 2007 security audit. Too, they are a hackers dream, so much so that the full report could not be issued for fear of placing a complete back-door entry system into hackers’ hands.

Ms. Bowen ordered changes that angered County officials, machine vendors and workers groaned at the extension of an already brutally long election day. She was awarded (along with Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner of Ohio, who worked to clean up Ohio’s flawed system) the 2008 John F. Kennedy Profiles in Courage Award for fighting to ensure vote integrity.

Said Ms. Bowen in her speech, “I would rather be greeted with cynicism and criticism… than to live with the certain knowledge that my actions, or failure to act, did not come from a deep place of justice and integrity.” 

We have a confrontational system. Fundamental fears of public employees being brought into question, against the zealous pursuit of fraud by those making this their life’s calling. Under such scrutiny, no one could ever pass muster, so tension, charges and counter-charges build exponentially.

Am I Pollyanna or Rodney (“why can’t we all just get along?”) King suggesting the two sides work together free from confrontation? Maybe and such a place does exist. Northern California’s Humboldt County’s biggest neighbouring city is northward in Oregon. San Francisco is five hours to the south. 45,000 people live there and Carolyn Crnich is County Clerk and Elections Director.

Said Carolyn, “this was a ‘monster under the bed’ issue.” We’d heard so much about the possibilities for hacking. We’d never seen it and our County could not possibly swing a national election, Nonetheless I wanted it to be right and there were others here who felt the same way.”

That’s a good politician’s answer. So enter Kevin Collins, local concerned citizen and commercial fisherman. He’d read a few articles and saw that Humboldt County was switching to Diebold touch screen machines. Based on what he’d read, “that seemed like a bad idea,” said Kevin. “I was lucky I had county officials willing to listen to someone they didn’t know from Adam. When I read we would lose a perfectly valid paper ballot, another fisherman and I went to the Board of Supervisors. They were receptive and pointed us in the direction of the registrar. We approached her and did the best we could to lobby. She was certain scan balloting was as safe as you could get.”

She did though point them to Carolyn. “She was very welcoming” said Kevin. “We told her we have a functioning system people have faith in and there’s all kind of reasons not to go to touch screens. Carolyn was open to the idea.”

Back in 2003, Carolyn was debating to attend a conference sponsored by sceptics of the touch screen movement. California, unlike other states, does not mandate which machines a county should use. She came back from that conference, shelved the Diebold proposal and stayed with paper ballots.

Said Kevin, “she really understood our concerns” and asked “how can we make the system work better?”

Said Carolyn, “people said the sky is falling and there were some who came and we together asked: how do we prevent the sky from falling?”

Their joint question was what if every person owning a computer could view an image of every ballot cast? They could then see the same results the County sees from the optical scan units and count them in any way they wanted: by hand, by precinct, by candidate… all of them?

Said Carolyn, “by offering the raw data it could inspire others to develop an open source solution to speed counting online, in person or otherwise. We wanted something that was free-standing and not connected to our certified election system. The more people look at results, the better it is for us. I would think the vendors, assuming they are open and honest, would be interested and line up behind us. I think though that they were very nervous about it.”

Said Kevin, “now anyone can download the entire last election’s results from here. 23,000 total ballots were cast countywide, so this gave us a good sample.”

Said Carolyn, “we maintained such high security around the ballots it took more time than the scanning. We hovered so much to ensure transparency and to re-assure everyone there weren’t ‘aliens in the supply room.’”

Said Carolyn, “If anyone has counted those ballots and found a mistake, they have not made me aware of it. And there was no reaction from Diebold, even though it shows the system worked fine.”

When I asked her if she was afraid of personal attack?  Her answer was “I think, no… rather than protect myself I’m just trying to stay one step ahead.”

She finally said, “in this work, you’re damned if you do or you don’t.”

Share and Enjoy:

These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Mixx

Denis Campbell is publisher and editor of UKProgressive. He is an investigative journalist and businessman whose instincts lead to breaking political and business stories on everything from: election machine voting fraud, political party misdeeds and the scandal ridden Mind Body Spirit business that fleeces many of its followers. His work has appeared in many international news publications across all media platforms including: The BBC, The Huffington Post, Western Mail, The Guardian and PokerNews.com. He writes from very cool 600-acre farm high above the cliffs along Wales' historic Glamorgan Heritage coast.
Email this author | All posts by Denis Campbell

Comments are closed.

Sunday, 5th July 2009



Live Political Twitter Feed

Wilderness Dispatches

One of the few times I will ever say the words wow, good job and FOX in the same sentence. Great story well reported.

Advertisers

Follow and Bookmark us






Bookmark and Share

Tags

Alaska Governor Sarah Palin Al Gore BBC Bill Clinton Charley James clinton CNN David Cameron democratic party democrats Denis Campbell Dick Cheney FOX FOX News George Bush George W. Bush Georgia GOP Gordon Brown Iraq Joe Biden John McCain Karl Rove Keith Olbermann London McCain MSNBC NBC New York Times obama Palin President Obama Republicans Rush Limbaugh Sarah Palin super delegates Tesco The Netherlands Tony Blair Tories Twitter UK Wales White House Yahoo!

WP Cumulus Flash tag cloud by Roy Tanck requires Flash Player 9 or better.



Friends

LA ProgressiveProPublica
Divazzy
Grainger and Whitney
Panoramic TVCambria Politico

Contributors

Dr Anthony Asadullah SamadCarl MatthesCharley JamesDavid Swanson
Denis CampbellDick PriceDorret Groot WassinkKevin Lynn
Madeleine Begun KaneMonroe AndersonMarcus SternMark leVine
Robert ReichRev. Monroe AndersonSherwood RossSharon Kyle

Links

BBC NewsCambria PoliticoThe Colbert Report
Countdown with keith OlbermenCSpanDenis Campbell : An American In Wales
Energy Grid MagazineThe GuardianLAProgressive
Mad Kane’s Political Madness
Monroe AndersonThe Huffington Post
The IndependantJamie & LouiseMad Kane
MSNBCNew York Times OnlineProgressive Curmudgeon
The Daily ShowTED.com - Ideas Worth SpreadingThe Telegraph
ViaMichelinWall Street Journal

Browse Archives


About The UKProgressive

UK Progressive E-Magazine began during the 2008 US Presidential Campaign and was created to consolidate and replace two blogs created in 2006 called “Outside the Boundaries,” a political blog and “Fire the Guru!” an expose blog of charlatans in the Mind Body Spirit business. It was briefly called The Vadimus Post. That name came from the Latin 'Quo Vadimus' or 'Where Are We Headed?'

When looking for pithy Latin URL names, I’d watched a moving episode of the same name (different tense, Quo Vadis) from Sports Night, an early series created by The West Wing’s Aaron Sorkin. It was the last episode and focused on the sale of the network to an unknown billionaire who asked the question every day of those who worked closest to him. He wanted to know the answer and… Do We Know Why? His rationale: we spend so much time on things urgent, we miss the important and do we ask ourselves (and others) why we are heading in a particular direction?

Well that is what we ask in these Op-Ed pieces, articles, live feeds, video segments and contributions from friends and affiliates. We are blessed to be able to dialogue with you and our aim is to provide independent, critical insight into the issues of the day. UK Progressive is published daily in Monknash, South Wales. Its founder, An American in Wales, is US journalist Denis Campbell who has been based in The Netherlands and the UK the last 11-years.

The opinions expressed are those of each contributor and do not represent the opinion of Denis Campbell (unless expressly authored by him), our advertisers, any related companies and/or their affiliates. This website is copyright protected by various submitting authors, is reproduced with their permission and we operate under a Creative Commons licence that allows for our content to be re-published for non-commercial, non-derivative use, without editing, or changing and that credit be provided to UK Progressive with a track back URL and, where specified, the individual writer's website link. Thank you and welcome.

Donate


UK Progressive is a free, continuously improving news distribution service (because none of us could live with ourselves or face our mothers if every edition did not represent our very best effort). A lot of work goes daily into producing this true labour of love.

While most of us have other day jobs to eat, we’d love to get to the point where we can monetize this so it covers all of our expenses, allows us to pay our contributors for their fine work and helps us to continue to expand and grow. While not like PBS or other media groups shilling for logo umbrellas every ten minutes, we find it embarrassing to even have to ask… and we could use your help.

If you like what you see here and would like to help us bring it to you by making a donation to support future developments, well, we’d really appreciate it. Our PayPal account is named after a lovely canal side café in Lochem, The Netherlands which our office overlooked years ago.

We promise a team cheer and ‘happy dance’ in your name in advance. Thanks.



License


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 UK: England & Wales License.


Copyright 2009 UKProgressive     Contact Us | About Us | Terms and ConditionsWebsite by Divazzy | Branding by Grainger and Whitney | Video Production by Panoramic TV | EversonNews Theme by Everson