<<http://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/27/opinion/27krug.html?ex=1248667200&en=3
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Fear of Fraud By PAUL KRUGMAN

Published: July 27, 2004

 
It's election night, and early returns suggest trouble for the incumbent.
Then, mysteriously, the vote count stops and observers from the
challenger's campaign see employees of a voting-machine company, one
wearing a badge that identifies him as a county official, typing
instructions at computers with access to the vote-tabulating software. 

When the count resumes, the incumbent pulls ahead. The challenger demands
an investigation. But there are no ballots to recount, and election
officials allied with the incumbent refuse to release data that could
shed light on whether there was tampering with the electronic records.

This isn't a paranoid fantasy. It's a true account of a recent election
in Riverside County, Calif., reported by Andrew Gumbel of the British
newspaper The Independent. Mr. Gumbel's full-length report, printed in
Los Angeles City Beat, makes hair-raising reading not just because it
reinforces concerns about touch-screen voting, but also because it shows
how easily officials can stonewall after a suspect election.

Some states, worried about the potential for abuse with voting machines
that leave no paper trail, have banned their use this November. But
Florida, which may well decide the presidential race, is not among those
states, and last month state officials rejected a request to allow
independent audits of the machines' integrity. A spokesman for Gov. Jeb
Bush accused those seeking audits of trying to "undermine voters'
confidence," and declared, "The governor has every confidence in the
Department of State and the Division of Elections."

Should the public share that confidence? Consider the felon list.

Florida law denies the vote to convicted felons. In 2000 the state hired
a firm to purge supposed felons from the list of registered voters; these
voters were turned away from the polls. After the election, determined by
537 votes, it became clear that thousands of people had been wrongly
disenfranchised. Since those misidentified as felons were
disproportionately Democratic-leaning African-Americans, these errors may
have put George W. Bush in the White House.

This year, Florida again hired a private company - Accenture, which
recently got a homeland security contract worth up to $10 billion - to
prepare a felon list. Remembering 2000, journalists sought copies. State
officials stonewalled, but a judge eventually ordered the list released.

The Miami Herald quickly discovered that 2,100 citizens who had been
granted clemency, restoring their voting rights, were nonetheless on the
banned-voter list. Then The Sarasota Herald-Tribune discovered that only
61 of more than 47,000 supposed felons were Hispanic. So the list would
have wrongly disenfranchised many legitimate African-American voters,
while wrongly enfranchising many Hispanic felons. It escaped nobody's
attention that in Florida, Hispanic voters tend to support Republicans.

After first denying any systematic problem, state officials declared it
an innocent mistake. They told Accenture to match a list of registered
voters to a list of felons, flagging anyone whose name, date of birth and
race was the same on both lists. They didn't realize, they said, that
this would automatically miss felons who identified themselves as
Hispanic because that category exists on voter rolls but not in state
criminal records.

But employees of a company that prepared earlier felon lists say that
they repeatedly warned state election officials about that very problem.

Let's not be coy. Jeb Bush says he won't allow an independent examination
of voting machines because he has "every confidence" in his handpicked
election officials. Yet those officials have a history of slipshod
performance on other matters related to voting and somehow their errors
always end up favoring Republicans. Why should anyone trust their verdict
on the integrity of voting machines, when another convenient mistake
could deliver a Republican victory in a high-stakes national election? 

This shouldn't be a partisan issue. Think about what a tainted election
would do to America's sense of itself, and its role in the world. In the
face of official stonewalling, doubters probably wouldn't be able to
prove one way or the other whether the vote count was distorted - but if
the result looked suspicious, most of the world and many Americans would
believe the worst. I'll write soon about what can be done in the few
weeks that remain, but here's a first step: if Governor Bush cares at all
about the future of the nation, as well as his family's political
fortunes, he will allow that independent audit. 

------
"Where annual elections end, there slavery begins" -- John Adams

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