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A Flawed US Election Reform Bill

Journal written by doom (14564) and posted by kdawson on Thu Jul 12, 2007 08:45 AM
from the paper-trails-at-high-cost dept.
H.R.811 sounds great: It's stated purpose is "to require a voter-verified permanent paper ballot." Unfortunately, it sounds like the details have some devils, as usual. From the Bev Harris article Is a flawed bill better than no bill?: "[T]he Holt Bill provides for a paper trail (toilet paper roll-style records affixed to DRE voting machines) in 2008, requires more durable ballots in 2010, and requires a complex set of audits. It also cements and further empowers a concentration of power over elections under the White House, gives explicit federal sanction to trade secrets in vote counting, mandates an expensive 'text conversion' device that does not yet exist which is not fully funded, and removes 'safe harbor' for states in a way that opens them up to unlimited, expensive, and destabilizing litigation." Update: 07/11 16:23 GMT by KD : Derek Slater writes "EFF's e-voting expert Matt Zimmerman recently published this article separating the myths about HR 811 from the facts, and countering many of the misleading and outright false claims being made about it."
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[+] US Paperless Voting Bill Advances 153 comments
A couple of weeks back we discussed the effort to require voting paper trails in US federal elections. Now WhiteBoxVoter writes: "Democrats and Republicans in the US House of Representatives agreed today on a compromise that will push through a bill banning paperless voting machines and requiring a voter-verified paper record for every vote in the country, after government sanctioned hackers showed how they could break into all three of the top voting systems used in California." The NYTimes reported on Thursday that even if it passes the House, voting-machine reform that would take effect before the 2008 elections may die in the Senate.
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  • by tttonyyy (726776) on Thursday July 12 2007, @08:50AM (#19836643) Homepage Journal
    Type "Wii" to much and you start producing words like "Biill".

    I knew I was a PHP ubergeek when I found myself typing "mysql" automatically whenever I meant to type "myself" in e-mails (and I did it typing this sentence and had to correct it, I kid you not!).
    • by tttonyyy (726776) Alter Relationship on Thursday July 12, @08:50AM (#19836643)
      Sure, but that doesn't explain your muscle-memory producing "tttonyyy" for your nick.
  • My opinion (Score:5, Insightful)

    by CastrTroy (595695) on Thursday July 12 2007, @09:00AM (#19836715) Homepage
    My opinion is that the US election system has become too cumbersome/complicated for the average person. I'm Canadian, and I find voting very simple. Federal elections require me to check 1 box. That's it. There is about 7? boxes to choose from depending on which riding you are located in. Each box shows the name of the representative of a specific party. Provincial elections are the same, although there's usually less boxes. Municipal elections are actually the most complicated, in which I have to vote for Mayor, Councillor, and school board trustee. There's too many options on the US ballot, and having different ballots for every state or county when people are electing the president just makes things overly complicated. There would be no need for voting machines if people weren't voting on 75 different issues for every election. A simple pencil and paper ballot works a lot better.
    • by Dachannien (617929) on Thursday July 12 2007, @09:04AM (#19836743)
      In other words, the US election system sucks because we don't just vote for a supreme overlord and be done with it?

      Although, if there were a box on my ballot labeled, "I, for one, welcome our new robotic overlords," I'd probably check it.
      • Diebold (Score:4, Funny)

        by rustalot42684 (1055008) <rustalot42684.gmail@com> on Thursday July 12 2007, @09:09AM (#19836799)
        So that's a vote registered to Diebold, right?
      • n other words, the US election system sucks because we don't just vote for a supreme overlord and be done with it?


        I don't know about you, but my last ballot said:

        Supreme Overload (check only ONE):
        [ ] The Dark One
        [ ] One Ring to Rule Them All...
        [ ] The Lord of Mordor
        [ ] Sauron, The Dark Lord

        And I was really confused. So I just filled one in at random.

        It's perhaps worth nothing that I live in Florida.
      • Re:My opinion (Score:5, Insightful)

        by CastrTroy (595695) on Thursday July 12 2007, @09:37AM (#19837049) Homepage
        Actually, no, we only vote for the people who will represent us in our tiny little area. So we don't vote for the Prime Minister, or the provincial premier, (at least no most of us). We vote for somebody from our area who is (supposedly) looking out for the people in that small area. The leader of the party with the most people voted in become Prime Minister. In the US, people do vote for the supreme overload (the president) but the problem is that they also have to vote for millions of other little things. What's the point of electing people if you can't delegate to them some of the decision making.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Or do it the way it is in Toronto municipal elections: there is an arrow with a gap thru it like so:
      = =>
      next to each name. you use the advanced technology of the 'pencil' to complete the arrow of your desired candidate (for mayor and for councillor, they're separate categories), and then it goes into a scanner that detects which arrow you selected. Then it goes into a stack so there is a paper trail. This way you get the advantages of machine voting with the advantages of paper voting.
      • Re:My opinion (Score:5, Insightful)

        by CastrTroy (595695) on Thursday July 12 2007, @10:35AM (#19837717) Homepage
        I cannot have confidence in a voting system unless I completely understand how it works. I am a software developer, and I don't trust any voting system which uses software specifically because most people, including myself, wouldn't be able to understand the system, or wouldn't take the time to understand the system, even if they could. With paper ballots that are counted by hand, I completely understand every aspect of the voting and counting system. People from all parties can actually watch the actual count and verify that they are counted correctly. Security measure can be put in place to ensure that there is no ballot stuffing, by checking the box before hand, and comparing the number of votes counted to the number of people who actually voted. I'm not saying paper is infallible, but that I trust it because I can look at it and understand it. Why should I believe the claims that your "VoteHere" system is any more reliable or trustworthy than a system made by Diebold? Like you said, "Trust no one". Why should I trust any organization if I can't verify the voting process by myself.

        Also, the other problem with using machines is that they sometimes break, or there aren't enough of them to go around, and people end up waiting hours in line to vote. I've never had to wait more than 5 minutes to cast my ballot, and that's the way it should be. Making people wait so long to vote discourages them, and brings down the number of people who vote, and this invalidates the whole problem.
  • by conspirator57 (1123519) on Thursday July 12 2007, @09:02AM (#19836735)
    On top of the usual politicking and industry appeasement, there is the fact that there is only one engineer in congress now, and he's a civil.

    If as our fearless leaders say "the future of America is the knowledge worker and innovator" then we must start electing a few (or more) people with technical backgrounds.

    For this to happen, some of us introverted technical folks are going to have to swallow that and run for office.

    • by internic (453511) on Thursday July 12 2007, @09:54AM (#19837277)

      Rush Holt, the author of H.R. 811, has a Ph.D. in Physics. Also note that a bill does not always represent what the law maker thinks is best, but rather it's the best thing they think can actually pass.

        • by internic (453511) on Thursday July 12 2007, @11:02AM (#19838015)

          Yeah, but we shouldn't be passing a bill just to pass one. This bill will actually make things worse by explicitly or implicitly allowing many of the problems to remain, while simultaneously removing the ability of the states to make the systems better on their own, and increasing costs all around just for good measure. If they can't do it right, then they should stay the hell away from the issue and at least let the states have a shot at it on their own.

          By adding a voter-verifiable paper trail, it addresses by far the most serious problem with DRE voting machines. Using the rationale that we shouldn't pass it because it leaves some problems unsolved is making the perfect the enemy of the good. This is the way many activist communities shoot themselves in the foot. As for limiting the states, as I understand it this doesn't. From the EFF [eff.org]:

          The higher standards required by HR 811 would provide the beginning, not the end, of serious election reform. States wishing to, say, ban all electronic voting machines, impose stricter audit requirements, or force vendors to publicly disclose all of their source code will remain free to do so, as they are today. If HR 811 becomes law, however, states would not be permitted to lag behind in many important areas as so many do today.
  • by Notquitecajun (1073646) on Thursday July 12 2007, @09:03AM (#19836737)
    The bill looks like it creates far more problems than it repairs...and doesn't repair the problems it is supposed to in the first place.

    I'm a right-winger who doesn't think there is much to the election fraud arguments, and even I think that there needs to be a paper trail for voting. We don't need new laws to fix the problem, new bureaucracies...if there is ONE thing that needs to be transparent in government, it is the election process. BOTH sides of the aisle look bad on election matters right now, and no real practical solution has arisen out of Washington yet.
    • by lawpoop (604919) on Thursday July 12 2007, @09:10AM (#19836805) Homepage Journal

      BOTH sides of the aisle look bad on election matters right now, and no real practical solution has arisen out of Washington yet.
      Well, jeez, what is their incentive to fix things? Apparently election fraud is how they get into office!
    • While in principal I agree that every vote counts, and every vote is sacred... [deep breath] An election is a system. It is a machine. It has to have SOME fault-tolerance.

      But when one vote can swing one state can swing one electoral bloc can swing one election can swing one world climate/political landscape/economy... THAT is a BSOD waiting to happen. With the ability to count 99.994% of the votes instantly, the need for the Electoral College is obviated. Instead of using a fault-ridden system (Imagine if
  • by conureman (748753) on Thursday July 12 2007, @09:19AM (#19836875)
    I guess if they're going to quit pretending to count my vote, maybe I can quit pretending it matters, and I can stay home and wait for the results on teevee like every one else. What a time-saver!
  • by vsavkin (136167) on Thursday July 12 2007, @09:19AM (#19836879)
    > a voter-verified permanent paper ballot

    yeah, but will it blend?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 12 2007, @09:21AM (#19836901)
    I reckon we should ask Hillary.
  • by AlHunt (982887) on Thursday July 12 2007, @09:21AM (#19836903) Journal
    >[T]he Holt Bill provides for a paper trail (toilet paper roll-style records

    How fitting. I think all federal documents should be thus produced.

  • by internic (453511) on Thursday July 12 2007, @10:21AM (#19837547)

    Some of the objections given at the beginning of the article seem to be worth considering. The straw man debate that follows is just idiotic, however. It might be useful to look at what some actual supporters have to say, supporters like the EFF [eff.org], Prof. Ed Felten [freedom-to-tinker.com], Ars Technica [arstechnica.com], the Brennan Center for Justice [federalele...reform.com], People of the American Way, TrueVoteMD [truevotemd.org], and Prof. Avi Rubin [blogspot.com] to name a few.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Democrat and Republican are useless categories. When an issue can be influenced by money, both of those parties are susceptible. Monied interests would like to push elections towards people they've already paid, but if it goes the other way they can handle that too. It's just more expensive.

      • Re:Amazing (Score:5, Insightful)

        by hey! (33014) on Thursday July 12 2007, @10:37AM (#19837737) Homepage Journal
        I can't agree. The Democrats aren't what they ought to be, of course, but can you honestly say that straight up Republican rule produced the same results as straight up Democratic rule, which we've had many times in the last fifty years?

        The problem with the Republican party is that they are no longer conservatives. When I was kid, the Republican party was a place for people of a temperate, Burkean conservative temperament. This viewpoint was skeptical, and very wary of the dangers posed by misuse of government power, but in the end pragmatic. Now, I'm a Democrat, but that's the kind of Republican government I could live with.

        The problem was this hadn't produced a big, generational victory for the Republicans like the Democrats had after the Great Depression.

        So, certain elements in the party decided to gain power by inflaming populist fears and anger. To do this, they needed media power and that takes money. This mix of populism and secret privilege lead to electoral success for the party, but not political success. The Republican party shifted to a new ideological style that is nearly the opposite of what the old Republican party stood for. The rank and file Republicans I know aren't for a larger and more expensive government with unprecedented powers to intrude into the affairs of its citizens.

        Some Democrats I know toyed with the Greens until the 2000 election fiasco. They didn't think the Democrats stood up for Democratic principles. Where is the party that stands up for traditional Republican values?
    • Re:Amazing (Score:5, Insightful)

      by internic (453511) on Thursday July 12 2007, @09:59AM (#19837347)

      Remember, the point of this bill is to add auditing requirements and voter verifiability. For whatever flaws it might have, those are laudible goals that are designed to fight corruption.

      Offhand, I am guessing that this has MS written ALL over it.

      Offhand, I'd say you're wrong. Originally, this bill required the voting machine software to be open source. I think that was weakened in a compromise to actually get the thing passed, but it still requires some outside review of the source, as I understand it. AFAIK, MS has been against this bill from the start because it required such openness.

    • Re:Amazing (Score:5, Interesting)

      by GreyPoopon (411036) <gpoopon&gmail,com> on Thursday July 12 2007, @10:52AM (#19837911)

      The dems are fighting against this admin, accuse it of being corrupt (which it obviously is), is possibly about to lose the ability to monitor the WH (if they lose the up-coming battle in SCOTUS), and YET, they want to put voting admin under the WH.

      The truth of the matter is that as long as we use an electoral system for the presidential election, the STATES should be in control of each of their voting standards and not the federal government. And as long as each state will have a certain number of elected representatives, each state should have its own control over how that process works, too. If a certain state wants to use flawed voting machines to determine the outcome of the election, so be it. If a state wants to let its governor appoint senators, representatives and choose who will receive the electoral votes, so be it. That is the way the system is supposed to work in this country, and I personally want the feds to stay out of it. At best, the federal government should be allowed to publish information about perceived problems in the voting systems of certain states so that the residents of that states have an opportunity to change. If desired change doesn't happen, the residents can move to another state, and the number of representatives and electoral votes can be adjusted accordingly during the next census. If any combination of the three branches of our federal government are going to be allowed to control election standards and methods for the individual states, we might as well take all control away from the states and make the next step towards dictatorship.