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Santosh Helekar wrote... 
> Even though I thought initially that this was an election that was  
> legitimately won by Bush, it
> now appears that there is growing doubt about the voting procedures and the 
> actual vote counts.


Santosh,  I saw the article below on another d-list.

Regards,
George


Was the Ohio Election Honest and Fair?

Excerpts From: Institute for Public Accuracy 
915 National Press Building, Washington, D.C. 20045
(202) 347-0020 * http://www.accuracy.org * [EMAIL PROTECTED]
___________________________________________________

TERESA FEDOR, [via Greg Lestini, [EMAIL PROTECTED] Ohio State Senator Teresa 
Fedor
said today: "There was trouble with our elections in Ohio at every stage. It's 
been a battle
getting people registered to vote, getting to the ballot on voting day and 
getting that  vote to
count. There is a pattern of voter suppression; that's why I called  for [Ohio 
Secretary of State]
Blackwell's resignation more than a month ago. Blackwell, while claiming to run 
an unbiased
elections process, was also the co-chair of the Bush-Cheney campaign in Ohio. 
Additionally, he was

the spokesperson for the anti-business, anti-family constitutional amendment 
'Issue 1,' and a
failed initiative to repeal a crucial sales-tax revenue source for the state. 
Blackwell learned
his moves from the Katherine Harris playbook of Florida 2000, and we won't 
stand for it."

BILL MOSS, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Executive vice president of HBCU Connect, which works to connect historically 
black colleges and
universities, Moss said today: "I stayed in line two and a half hours. I've 
never seen anything
like this in my life. There were fewer voting machines in the highly 
concentrated black areas,
creating the long lines so as to frustrate the voters. But we knew the 
Republicans -- many of whom
became Republicans because they opposed equal rights for blacks -- would try to 
drive down black
turnout. ... [Ohio Secretary of State] Blackwell was confusing things by 
raising issues like 
the paper weight of cards."

SUSAN TRUITT, [EMAIL PROTECTED], http://www.caseohio.org
Co-founder of the Citizens Alliance for Secure Elections, Truitt said today: 
"Seven counties in
Ohio have electronic voting machines and none of them have paper trails. That 
alone raises issues
of accuracy and integrity as to how we can verify the count. A recount without 
a paper trail is 
meaningless; you just get a regurgitation of the data. Last year, Blackwell 
tried to get the
entire state to buy new machines without a paper trail. The exit polls, 
virtually the only check
we have against tampering with a vote without a paper trail, had shown Kerry 
with a lead. ... A
poll worker told me this morning that there were no tapes of the results posted 
on some machines;
on other machines the posted count was zero, which obviously shouldn't be the 
case."

DAN WALLACH, [EMAIL PROTECTED], http://www.cs.rice.edu/~dwallach, 
http://www.accuracy.org/press_releases/PR062104.htm Wallach is an assistant 
professor of Computer
Science at Rice University in  Houston specializing in building secure and 
robust software systems
for the Internet. Along with colleagues at Johns Hopkins, Wallach co-authored a 
groundbreaking
study that revealed significant flaws in electronic voting systems. He appeared 
on an Institute
for Public Accuracy news release in June entitled "Electronic Voting -- Danger 
for Democracy."

BOB FITRAKIS, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
An attorney who monitored the election with the Election Protection Coalition, 
Fitrakis said
today: "There were far fewer machines in the inner-city districts than in the 
suburbs. I
documented at least a dozen people leaving because the lines were so long in 
African-American
areas. Blackwell did a great deal of suppressing before the election -- like 
attempting to refuse
to process voter registration forms. The absentee ballots were misleading in 
Franklin County.
Kerry was the third line down, but you had to punch number four to vote for 
him. Bush was getting
both his votes as well as Kerry's."

HARVEY WASSERMAN, [EMAIL PROTECTED], 
http://www.freepress.org/departments/display/19/2004/810
Senior editor of FreePress.org, an Ohio-based web site, and co-author with 
Fitrakis of the recent
article "Twelve Ways Bush is Now Stealing the Ohio Vote," Wasserman said today: 
"There was a huge
fight around ensuring that the electronic voting machines had paper trails and 
there was
resistance by the secretary of state, so there is no paper trail. There were 
some victories to
ensure a paper trial -- by 2006. There were limited numbers of voting machines 
in African-American
districts. Some people had to wait up to eight hours, far more than in 
predominantly white areas."

BACKGROUND AND CONTEXT:

On November 3, 2004, Reuters reported: "Voters across the United States 
reported problems with
electronic touch-screen systems on Tuesday in what critics said could be a sign 
that the machines
used by one-third of the population were prone to error.... "
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/1103-03.htm

On October 24, 2004, the Palm Beach Post reported: "A federal judge on Monday 
rejected U.S. Rep.
Robert Wexler's claim that paperless electronic voting violates the 
constitutional rights of
Floridians...." 
http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/content/news/epaper/2004/10/26/c1a_wexler_
1026.html

On November 3, 2004, Thomas Crampton wrote in the International Herald Tribune: 
"The global
implications of the U.S. election are undeniable, but international monitors at 
a polling station
in southern Florida said Tuesday that voting procedures being used in the 
extremely close contest
fell short in many ways of the best global practices...."
http://www.iht.com/articles/2004/11/02/news/observe.html



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