New voting system
falls short of verifiable
By BRETT
BURSEY Guest
columnist
While The State has devoted considerable ink to the debate over
the Election Commission’s plan to buy new voting machines, much of
it has been in support of the $46.5 million acquisition. Those
critical of the state’s plan have been labeled Luddites, accused of
playing Chicken Little and dismissed as part of an “Internet-based
movement of paranoia.” Those charges are unfair and deflect rather
than address the serious questions voters have about the process
used to procure the machines and the efficiency of the machines
themselves.
If you are among the 33 percent of South Carolinians who care
enough about who will run the school house, the State House and the
White House to actually vote on Nov. 2, you assume that your vote
will count.
Don’t be so sure.
In the 2000 presidential election, 3.4 percent of votes cast in
South Carolina were not counted, twice the national average. That
adds up to 48,060 missing votes. These “residual ballots” include
“no-votes,” over-votes and technical failures.
In Williamsburg County, 14.5 percent of the voters who colored in
the circles on optical scan systems could have stayed home, because
their votes weren’t counted. Richland County voters should wonder if
their electronic vote was one of the 1,629 lost. Mine could have
been one of the 3,322 punch card votes that were spoiled in
Lexington County.
Clearly the system needs fixing. Unfortunately, the voting
machines the state intends to buy do not ensure that the vote cast
is the vote recorded and will do little to reduce the number of
residual ballots. Simply put, the only way to make sure a vote is
counted the way a voter intended is to allow voters to verify their
vote before they leave the poll.
The State argues that allegations of impropriety in the bid
process are so “ridiculous as to be unworthy of serious comment.”
This might be true if election officials in Arkansas and Louisiana
weren’t serving time in jail for accepting bribes from Election
Systems & Software, the same company that won South Carolina’s
bid, and the same company that our state Election Commission
director once worked for as a subcontractor.
The commission is opting for efficiency over accuracy in not
requiring a paper trail. And while state Attorney General Henry
McMaster said the law does not mandate voter-verifiable ballots,
that doesn’t mean they are a bad idea. Such a system would go a long
way toward restoring voter confidence at a time it is sorely
needed.
Some myths have circulated about voter-verified ballots:
• The receipt would encourage vote
buying. Reality: The receipts, or ballots, never leave the polling
place but are deposited in a box that is kept in case of a
recount.
• Only the new e-voting machines
protect the voting rights of the visually impaired. Reality: All
systems, including the optical scan, can have a machine in each
precinct that would “talk” to the voters and verify their vote.
• The system would cost too much.
Reality: If the Election Commission had included a provision for
voter-verified ballots in its original bid, it would not have cost
significantly more, if it raised the price at all. Lower-tech
systems provide a paper trail at a significant savings.
• Paper ballots would take too
much time. Reality: Voters who take the time to vote want to know
that their vote counts. They know computers crash, and that they can
be hacked. To safeguard their vote, surely South Carolinians would
wait the extra moment it would take to print out a ballot. We do it
at the ATM or grocery store. Why not at the polls?
The bottom line is that the state is rushing to buy and implement
a computer network voting system that doesn’t produce a verifiable
ballot, does not allow for a manual recount, and does not address
the problem of lost votes.
The claim that the state will lose $2 million if our system is
not in place before November is a self-induced emergency because
South Carolina did not ask for an extension, as most other states
did. And while federal and state legislation has been proposed that
would require voting machines to produce a paper trail, we are
preparing to spend all our grant money on a system that won’t.
Mr. Bursey is the director of the South Carolina Progressive
Network, a statewide coalition of advocacy organizations. Reach him
at network@scpronet.com. |