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FROM BEV: I've taken off on a 90-day road trip to investigate kickbacks. HOW DID WE GET INTO THIS SITUATION? WHO IS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE MESS? WHO'S GETTING PAID? Your contribution funds the answers to these questions. Watch for the first report: June 15.
Monday June 7, 2004 As members of the League of Women Voters, we are concerned that the League has become perhaps the single biggest obstacle to getting proper auditing of elections. Had the League's national office acted promptly to learn about this issue, legislation would already have been passed to enact not only a paper ballot, but to require the four audits which must become part of every election. One of the main obstacles to legislation is the League's strange position against (you heard me) -- AGAINST -- voter verified paper ballots. Many local League chapters are aghast at the peculiar stance taken the League's current national leadership. This weekend, in Washington D.C., local chapters may have the opportunity to enact a vote of no confidence in the leadership of the League of Women Voters. Now is a very good time to educate every League of Women Voters member in the USA. This week we have a unique opportunity to persuade the League of Women Voters to change their stance. Attend the meeting if you can. Pass out this information to everyone. Get over to the Washington Hilton Hotel on Connecticut Avenue, Washington D.C. on June 12, 13, 14 and 15 and pass out the Educate the League (Word document) to everyone you know. Here is a LWF E-voting flyer (one-page, pdf). These materials were designed by Bob and Jane Dean, specifically to educate the League of Women Voters. Also give these materials to your local press, and to national and Washington D.C. media. If you are not a member of the League of Women Voters, join the organization and make your voice heard. Bev Harris is a member. Dr. Barbara Simons, who helped to derail the ill-thought-out Pentagon "SERVE" project for Internet voting, is a member. You, too, can become a member. The Deans are members. We appeal to the membership to raise this issue at our National Convention. Bring it to the floor for discussion, reconsideration, and reversal.
League of Women Voters - Lancaster, PA Chapter One of America’s greatest organizations for the promotion of democracy has recently taken an astonishing position that seriously threatens the future of voting in our nation. Our own League of Women’s Voters now officially opposes the only effective means of guarding against electronic voting fraud and abuse. Our LWV favors electronic voting machines, while opposing vital safeguards. This position actually undermines the sanctity of democratic elections. We appeal to the membership to raise this issue at our National Convention. Bring it to the floor for discussion, reconsideration, and reversal. Background All of us know that computers are far from perfect. They have bugs. They can be invaded by hackers. They can magically and mysteriously lose important information we thought had been safely stored away. Since the Florida voting debacle in 2000, states have been rushing to install Electronic Voting Machines. Electronic voting machines are simply computers with voting programs. When you vote using most DRE touch-screen computers, no physical record is kept. Your vote disappears into the black box of bits, bytes, mega-this and giga-that. From then on, the only people who really know whether your vote is counted correctly are the machine manufacturers, programmers and hackers who may or may not have a vested interest in the outcome. Software can never be pronounced absolutely free of bugs or safe from potential hackers. Every few weeks, Microsoft-the world’s leading software company-announces a “fix” for Windows, the biggest selling software in the world. We often hear on the news about newly found, dangerous security flaw in Windows. Why is that? Is Microsoft incompetent? No. But software is by nature profoundly complex. Errors can be overlooked for years. Security gaps can be easily missed-even by teams of experts. Even more ominous, inserting just a couple of characters in a program is all that’s needed to allow a hacker to manipulate the outcome during an election. The Solution Virtually all experts agree that the only way to make sure a computer voting machine works correctly is by carefully evaluating its results. That means a physical printout of each voter’s confirmed choices must be locked away, and then there must be routine, random comparisons, or audits, to test these paper results against selected machines at each election. This system of safeguards is known as the Voter Verified Paper Ballots (VVPB) solution. Computer and voting experts universally agree that Voter Verified Paper Ballots are the only viable solution. In fact, the only people really opposed to voter verified paper ballots appear to be the machine manufacturers, like Diebold, Inc., and the League of Women Voters! The League’s Current Position is Incorrect On it’s web site, the leadership of the LWV has posted several reasons for opposing voter verified paper ballots. Let’s review each of the points posted on the national web site League of Women Voters National Web Site.
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Note from Bev Harris: But throwing away paper ballots is not the best recourse for visually impaired voters anyway. In Rhode Island, and in Europe, tactile ballots are used for the visually impaired. These are simply ballot styles which allow the blind voter to feel his way to voting privately, and much better than relying solely on touch screens they allow visually impaired voters to vote either at home, as absentees, or at the polling place, in both cases, in privacy. The federations for the blind have never objected to tactile ballot systems.
The National Federation of the Blind has, however, been promoting unauditable paperless voting on DREs, without disclosing that other methods are available. This organization did not mention to the League of Women Voters or to local voting officials that it took a $1 million contribution from Diebold Inc., and that it has formally announced that it is in partnership with Diebold on ATM machines. This failure to disclose alternate methods, when combined with nondisclosure of fiduciary relationships with a vendor, should be considered by the League in making a decision to rescind its earlier opposition to paper ballots.
Tactile ballots are cheaper, more auditable, equally private, and more accessible to visually impaired voters, since they can be used absentee, and some blind voters have difficulty driving themselves to polling places.
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