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President Bush signed The Help America Vote Act (HAVA) with great fanfare in
October 2002, but his enthusiasm for the legislation - designed mainly to prevent
a replay of the Florida chad-counting melodrama that rewarded him with the presidency
- always seemed more than a little contrived. Case in point: Tuesday's Senate
confirmation hearings
for nominees to a commission that must be created before key provisions of the
act can be implemented comes after many months of administration foot-dragging.
The Help America Vote Act authorized a total of $3.9 billion for various election
reforms over three fiscal years, including $2.16 billion for 2003. Congress
actually appropriated $1.5 billion for 2003 - a level of only about 70% of the
original authorization. And just $650 million of that appropriation, earmarked
for improving election administration and replacing punch-card and lever-voting
machines, has actually been distributed to the states.
The remaining $830 million has been stuck in Washington because the administration
dallied in nominating members to serve on the Election Assistance Commission
- a panel that the law requires be formed before additional money can be spent.
Under the Act, that body was supposed to be set up in February. President Bush
didn't get around to formally nominating any commissioners until June, and
then only nominated two Republicans without naming the two requisite Democratic
selections that the Democratic congressional leadership had already forwarded
to him. Finally, on September 12, the president announced his intention to formally
nominate the two Democrats to the commission. Six weeks later, Senate confirmation
hearings
are finally taking place. Once that process is completed, the nominees must
be actually vetted, voted on, and confirmed, then an executive director and
staff for the commission must be hired in order for it to really function.
As a result of all this delay, the $830 million remains unavailable to the
states to carry out the goals of the act: creating a statewide computerized
system for voter registration, providing certain information to voters at the
polls, enabling voters to check and change their vote, training poll workers,
and making voting at the polling place accessible for the disabled and citizens
whose first language is not English.
The original sponsors of the Help America Vote Act are trying to squeeze the
money through the system. For example, Representative Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) attached
an amendment
to the House version of the Transportation-Treasury bill that would allow the
General Services Administration to distribute the 2003 money before the Election
Assistance Commission is set up But for now, the money sits.
With the presidential election a year away, a recurrence of the Florida, 2000
nightmare is on track for defying the oft-repeated vow from Washington of "never
again." Perhaps because it wasn't such a nightmare for everyone.
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