November 16, 2006
Editorial
Counting the Vote, Badly
 
Last week's elections provided a lot of disturbing news about the 
reliability of electronic voting — starting, naturally, with Florida. 
In a Congressional race there between Vern Buchanan, a Republican, 
and Christine Jennings, a Democrat, the machines in Sarasota County 
reported that more than 18,000 people, or one in eight, did not 
choose either candidate. That "undervote" of nearly 13 percent is 
hard to believe, given that only about 2.5 percent of absentee voters 
did not vote in that race. If there was a glitch, it may have made 
all the difference. Ms. Jennings trails Mr. Buchanan by about 400 
votes.

The serious questions about the Buchanan- Jennings race only add to 
the high level of mistrust that many people already feel about 
electronic voting. More than half of the states, including 
California, New York, Ohio and Illinois, now require that electronic 
voting machines produce voter-verified paper records, which help 
ensure that votes are properly recorded. But Congress has resisted 
all appeals to pass a law that would ensure that electronic voting is 
honest and accurate across the nation.

Fortunately, that may be about to change. With the Democrats now in 
control of both houses, there is an excellent chance of passing tough 
electronic voting legislation. Representative Rush Holt, Democrat of 
New Jersey, had more than 200 co-sponsors for a strong electronic 
voting bill before this month's election, and support is likely to 
grow in the new Congress. In the Senate, Dianne Feinstein, the 
California Democrat who will be chairwoman of the Rules and 
Administration Committee, which oversees elections, plans to develop 
a similar bill.

The problems with elections go well beyond electronic voting. 
Partisan secretaries of state continue to skew the rules to favor 
their parties and political allies. States are adopting harsh 
standards for voter registration drives to make it harder for people 
to register, as well as draconian voter identification laws to make 
casting a ballot harder for poor people, racial minorities, the 
elderly and students. Some states have adopted an indefensible rule 
that provisional ballots cast at the wrong table of the correct 
polling place must be thrown out.

Congress has failed to address these and other important flaws with 
the mechanics of the election system. But this, too, may be about to 
change. Senator Feinstein is saying that providing fair access to the 
ballot will be among her committee's top priorities in the coming 
year. Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, Democrat of New York, plans to 
revise and reintroduce her "Count Every Vote Act," which takes an 
admirably broad approach to overhauling the voting system.

Election reform has tended to be a partisan issue, with Democrats 
arguing for reform and Republicans resisting it. It shouldn't be. 
Congressional Democrats should make fixing this country's broken 
system of elections a top priority, and Republicans should join them. 

Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/16/opinion/16thur1.html



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