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Second in a series on election problems in battleground states.
In Missouri, election administration issues have been especially controversial
because secretary of state Matt Bluntwho administers the systemis
also running for governor. In 2000, Missouri came in second only to Florida
in the number of allegations made about both voter fraud and vote suppression,
leading to a consent decree with the Department of Justice. Moreover, Senator
Kit Bond of Missouri has been the national point man on the voting fraud issue
for the last four years.
State election laws passed in Missouri after the 2000 election and the enactment
of the federal Help America Vote Act (HAVA), recent policy choices related to
HAVA implementation and court decisions that have interpreted HAVA restrictively,
all compound the likelihood that major problems will arise again in the state
this year.
Voter ID
HAVA requires only a small segment of voters to present identification to vote.
Nonetheless, in 2002, Missouri decided to go much further. It passed legislation
requiring all voters to show ID when voting. However, there is one exception:
if the poll workers know the voter, that voter does not have to show ID.
This is a huge opening to abuse of the ID requirement and selective enforcement.
It is not difficult to imagine who poll workers might allow to pass through
undisturbed, and which voters they will make demands of. There
already were allegations of selective enforcement of the ID rules during
the primaries in other states. Will this also present an opportunity to file
equal protection based litigation?
Provisional Ballots
Under HAVA, any voter who does not appear on the voter list or is told by the
poll official he or she is not eligible to vote, but believes he is a registered
voter in that jurisdiction, has the right to cast a provisional ballot, the
legitimacy of which will be determined later. The purpose of that change was
to ensure that no voter would be turned away from the polls.
Missouri state law (enacted since HAVA) mandates that provisional ballots be
thrown out if the voter cast the ballot in the wrong polling place. The state
Democratic Party filed a federal suit against the Missouri secretary of state
alleging that these provisions violate HAVA and defeat the purpose of provisional
ballots. The party also argued in an equal-protection claim that in Missouri's
2002 election, African-Americans were significantly more likely than whites
to have their provisional ballots thrown out. A
District Court judge ruled on October 12 (PDF) that provisional ballots
cast in the wrong precinct must be discardedprovided the voter was given
the correct polling site by a poll worker.
Both sides claimed a win in this decision. However, the question now is, how
can that ruling be enforced? How does anyone prove whether the voter was told
the correct polling site by the poll worker? Will both parties be required to
sign something affirming that conversation took place? Will this just add to
what already may be a highly contentious battle over the counting of provisional
ballots?
Machines
HAVA provided $325 million for the replacement of punch card and lever machines.
Nonetheless, because of inaction by election officials, a majority of Missourians
will continue to use both lever machines and the same punch card systems that
were the center of criticism in Florida in 2000.
It is notable that these systems are used in many urban centers, including St.
Louis and Kansas City. In addition to being widely recognized as the least accurate
type of voting technology, we know that punch
card machines record the votes of minority voters even less accurately
than the rest of the population. Moreover, more accurate technology, such as
optical scan machines, will be used in other parts of the state. That raises
the prospect of a possible equal protection, Bush v. Gore-based lawsuit.
Military Voters
In a controversial way, one group of Missouri voters will have an easier time
of voting this year: military personnel. That is because Missouri, by the secretary
of state's choice, is one of two states that is allowing military personnel
overseas to email their ballots. This is troubling for two reasons: those who
choose this option are implicitly waiving their right to a secret ballot. More
importantly, the e-mailed voting choices will be sent to a Pentagon contractor,
who will then fax them to elections officials in Missouri. There
have been allegations the contractor has partisan ties.
The role of the secretary of state in Missouri as both head of elections and
a partisan candidatenot only for re-election but election for governorunderscores
the problem of partisans running the administration of elections. Unfortunately,
most states do it this wayvoters everywhere will remember the role Katharine
Harris, Florida's elected secretary of state, played in the election of 2000.
Maybe the silver lining of a problematic election in Missouri will be renewed
calls for getting politics out of election administration in the United States.
Tova Andrea Wang is a program officer and Democracy Fellow at The Century
Foundation. She is most recently the author of an issue brief entitled Playing
Games with Democracy, on how the Help America Vote Act is being used
to disenfranchise voters.
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