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After Your Vote Vanishes

Editorial

The Washington Post
Friday, August 27, 2004, Page A20


IF MARYLAND voters are compelled to use electronic voting machines as set up by state officials, their votes on the touch-screens will be touched and gone — never to be recounted usefully if the system crashes, hackers attack, well-meaning programmers mess up or glitches arise. Such is the unnecessary risk that Maryland is running. Opponents of this vanishing-vote system have been in court this week seeking a preliminary injunction, asking that the state be required to equip machines with printers that would make a paper copy of each ballot. On the opening day of a three-day hearing before Anne Arundel County Circuit Judge Joseph P. Manck, the plaintiffs argued that the machines to be used in Maryland "are uniquely insecure and vulnerable to outside attack" and that changes can and must be made before votes are cast in November.

Why take a risk that could upset any contest — the presidential race included — with no sure way of knowing what votes were counted or for whom? Experiences elsewhere in the United States should give voters pause. As reported Sunday by The Post's Dan Keating, the votes of 678 voters in Rio Arriba County, N.M., were never recorded by the electronic machines in use there four years ago. Vice President Al Gore won the state by 366 votes. Even if all the missing votes had been for George W. Bush and given him the state's five electoral votes, it would not have changed the outcome of the presidential race; still, the foul-up showed what could happen in a tight vote if the machines are not correctly programmed — and how little could be done about it afterward.

At the Maryland hearing, Assistant Attorney General Michael D. Berman said the potential problems cited in the lawsuit by TrueVoteMD are based on "theoretical security vulnerabilities" that have not materialized in previous elections. But should we wait for an ugly surprise before taking a fundamental precaution? Maryland officials have spent too much time already resisting changes that can and should be made. For the record — the record that they may not have when election troubles arise — the integrity of the process should be protected.

© 2004 The Washington Post Company

 
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Breaking News

• Sept. 23, 2004 'A Massive Experiment' in Voting in The Washington Post
• Sept. 20, 2004 The Magic Voting Touch, an Editorial in The Washington Post
• Aug. 27, 2004 After Your Vote Vanishes, an Editorial in The Washington Post
• Aug. 26, 2004 Voting machine safeguards in question in The Baltimore Sun
• Aug. 25, 2004 Md. Machines Seek Vote of Confidence in The Washington Post
How They Could Steal The Election This Time: The Nation Magazine's exhaustive examination of the potential problems with DRE voting systems, including Diebold in Maryland
The Washington Post on TrueVote MD!
Blackwell Halts Deployment of Diebold Voting Machines for 2004
Gov. Ehrlich appoints new member to election board
E-voting regulators often join other side when leaving office
Women Voters Drop Paperless Vote Support
The Disability Lobby and Voting New York Times editorial
•Scans of the Hack the Vote article from the April issue of Vanity Fair magazine.
•Think You Voted in Maryland? Think Again
Takoma Park supports legislation to require modifications to new voting machines purchased by the State of Maryland to create a verifiable paper trail
Diebold "basically had no interest in putting actual security in this system," said Paul Franceus, one of the consultants. "It's not like they did it wrong. It's like they didn't bother."
MD Senate report finds security risks, recommends paper
Diebold gives paper trail for FREE to San Diego County!!

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