Making Democracy
Credible
EDITORIAL, NYTimes on
the Web, February 9, 2007
Time is growing short to head off
more embarrassing voting machine scandals. The presidential election
looms, yet nearly half of the states offer no reassuring paper trail so voters
who use electronic voting machines can check that their ballot choices are
accurately recorded.
With a proper sense of urgency, Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California, who
leads the Senate committee in charge of elections, is asking all of the right
questions about voting technology. This week, she ordered an investigation
of the case of as many as 18,000 electronic votes that turned up missing in a
tight Congressional race in Florida last November.
Senator Feinstein called on the Government Accountability Office and the
National Institute of Standards and Technology to conduct “top to bottom”
federal investigations of the machines used in Sarasota County, where the 18,000
votes may have disappeared. Florida is now moving to toss out electronic
voting machines that do not produce a paper trail. But this is no comfort
to Christine Jennings, the Democrat in the 13th Congressional District race,
which includes Sarasota County. She lost by 369 votes and is now in court
trying to find out what went wrong in the election.
Ms. Jennings is right to be skeptical about the election results. In
Sarasota County, her strongest county, there were “undervotes” — ballots that
did not record a vote in her race — on 14.9 percent of the ballots, five times
the undervoting rate on absentee ballots in the same election. With no
paper backup, the true touch-screen history is lost in the ether. So far,
Florida courts have denied Ms. Jennings’s request to have experts examine the
“black box” heart of the matter: the computer software code embedded in
the suspect machines.
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.
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