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New York, May 27, 2004Prodded by the federal legislation enacted
to prevent another election debacle like the 2000 presidential contest, many
jurisdictions across the country have been moving away from paper-based and
mechanical methods of voting toward the use of computerized voting machines.
But as we approach the 2004 presidential contest, some say that the swift move
toward the so-called direct recording electronic (DRE) devices, computerized
voting machines that work much like automated teller machines, could mean trading
one set of problems for another.
In a new issue brief from The Century Foundation, Tova Andrea Wang, senior
program officer and democracy fellow, reports that a campaign begun two years
ago with a small group of computer scientists who believe that DRE systems are
vulnerable to hacking and malfunction has become a national controversy. This
brief uses a step-by-step, straightforward approach to explain the technical
and political issues behind the debate over these voting machines.
According to Wang, the voting machine issue has taken on an urgency because
the Help America Vote Act (HAVA), which was enacted in 2002, imposes a number
of requirements on states with respect to voting machines, while providing federal
funding for replacement of older technology. In addition, she notes that even
though the law does not require that changes be made for another year and a
half, the use of DRE machines will have a significant impact on this year's
presidential contest. "Several states have already purchased and installed
electronic voting machines for use in the presidential election this fall. About
50 million people, or three out of every ten voters, will cast ballots on DRE
machines this year."
Wang reports that the DRE machines offer some important advantages over other
voting machines, particularly that they can be made fully accessible to the
disabled, including the visually impaired. She also notes that over time DRE
machines can be programmed in many languages, would significantly reduce voter
errors, and that voters reportedly find them easy to use. However, computer
scientists have pointed to several flaws in the computerized voting systems,
which make them vulnerable to tampering, manipulation and/or malfunction.
Wang reviews several proposals that have been made to prevent the voting machine
problems computer scientists have identified. These include a voter verified
paper trail (VVPT) and requiring open source code. Bills have been introduced
in Congress and in sixteen state legislatures across the country to require
that machines have voter verifiable paper trails. However, the original authors
of the Help America Vote Act and some civil rights and civic organizations,
such as the Leadership Conference for Civil Rights, advocates for the disabled,
election administrators, the League of Women Voters, are opposed to the immediate
implementation of a paper trail requirement because, they say, it can lead to
administrative problems, is not really a check against fraud, and can not be
made accessible to the disabled.
The Century Foundation publishes issue briefs to help explain and call attention
to public policy issues that are worthy of discussion and debate. This and other
briefs are available on The Century Foundation Website at www.tcf.org.
Tova Wang is available to discuss issues related to election reform. For more
information, contact Christy Hicks at (212) 452-7723 or [email protected].
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