Women Voters Drop Paperless Vote Support
June 14, 2004
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 7:41 p.m. ET
The League of Women Voters rescinded its support of paperless voting
machines on Monday after hundreds of angry members voiced concern that paper ballots
were the only way to safeguard elections from fraud, hackers or computer
malfunctions.
About 800 delegates who attended the nonpartisan league's biennial
convention in Washington voted overwhelmingly in favor of a resolution that supports
"voting systems and procedures that are secure, accurate, recountable and
accessible."
That relatively neutral stance was a sharp change from last year, when
league leaders endorsed paperless terminals as reliable alternatives to antiquated
punch card and lever systems. About 30 percent of the electorate will use
touchscreen voting machines in the November election, and hardly any of the
machines provide paper records that could be used in case of a contested
election.
Last year's endorsement infuriated members from chapters around the country
-- particularly in Silicon Valley and other technology-savvy enclaves, where
computer scientists say the systems jeopardize elections. Legitimate recounts
are impossible without paper records of every vote cast, they say.
E-voting critics who attended the five-day convention, which ends Tuesday,
said the league's revision was welcome -- if not overdue.
"My initial reaction is incredible joy and relief," said computer
scientist Barbara Simons, 63, past president of the Association for Computing
Machinery and a league member from a chapter in Palo Alto, Calif. "This issue was
threatening to split the league apart. ... The league now has a position that
I feel very comfortable supporting."
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