Fall out from the NY Times article.
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----- Forwarded Message ----
From: "Noah T. Winer, MoveOn.org Political Action" <moveon-help@list.moveon.org>
To: Edmund R. Kennedy <ekennedyx@yahoo.com>
Sent: Tuesday, January 8, 2008 10:45:05 AM
Subject: Did you see The New York Times Magazine?
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Click here to add your
name:
"We must act quickly to secure our elections with
paper ballots and audits before November."
Sign the Petition
Dear MoveOn member,
This Sunday's cover story in The New York Times
Magazine makes plain the threat: The winner of the 2008 presidential election
could be decided by flawed, insecure, and hackable electronic voting machines.1
This is the most prominent news coverage this issue has ever gotten, so it could
be our one last chance to get this right before the election in November.
Congress is poised to consider a new emergency paper ballots bill next week—but
we'll have to convince them to act right away.2
Can you sign this urgent petition asking local,
state, and federal officials to require paper ballots for our votes? Clicking
here will add your name:
http://pol.moveon.org/paper2008/o.pl?id=11873-5644579-jrPO70&t=3
The petition says: "We must act quickly to secure our elections with paper ballots
and audits before November."
Elections are run at the state level, so we'll deliver your signature and comments
to local election officials in addition to members of Congress.
Electronic
voting machines are so unreliable and insecure, we might elect the
wrong person president in 2008. As The New York
Times Magazine reports:
[Voting machines]
fail unpredictably, and in extremely strange ways; voters report
that their choices "flip" from one candidate to another before their
eyes; machines crash or begin to count backward; votes simply vanish.
(In the 80-person town of Waldenburg, Ark., touch-screen machines
tallied zero votes for one mayoral candidate in 2006—even though he's
pretty sure he voted for himself.) Most famously, in the November 2006
Congressional election in Sarasota, Fla., touch-screen machines
recorded an 18,000-person "undervote" for a race decided by fewer than
400 votes.3
You can read more from this scary report at the end of this email—and forward
it along to your friends and family. It's really compelling.
Congress hasn't been able to solve this problem yet, but there's one more chance
next week. Rep. Rush Holt of New Jersey is expected to introduce an emergency bill
to offer funding to states who switch from unreliable electronic voting machines
to paper ballots and audits.4 We'll ultimately need a mandate for these things,
but this bill would be a crucial first step to prevent some of the most dire threats
to the 2008 election.
But to pass the bill in time, we'll need to light a fire under Congress. At the same
time, we'll have to urge local election officials to read The New York Times Magazine story—and replace electronic voting
machines with paper ballots and audits before November.
Sign this emergency petition to stop the threat
from electronic voting machines right away. Click here to add your name:
http://pol.moveon.org/paper2008/o.pl?id=11873-5644579-jrPO70&t=4
Thank you for all you do.
–Noah, Jennifer, Laura, Carrie, and the MoveOn.org Political Action Team
Tuesday, January 8th, 2008
P.S. Here's more from this week's disturbing New
York Times Magazine story. Please forward this along to all your friends and
family.
Can You Count on Voting Machines?
By CLIVE THOMPSON, The New York Times Magazine,
January 6, 2008
Jane Platten gestured, bleary-eyed,
into the secure
room filled with voting machines. It was 3 a.m. on Nov. 7, and she had
been working for 22 hours straight. "I guess we've seen how technology
can affect an election," she said. The electronic voting machines in
Cleveland were causing trouble again.
For a while, it had looked as if things would go smoothly for the
Board of Elections office in Cuyahoga County, Ohio. About 200,000
voters had trooped out on the first Tuesday in November for the lightly
attended local elections, tapping their choices onto the county's 5,729
touch-screen voting machines. The elections staff had collected
electronic copies of the votes on memory cards and taken them to the
main office, where dozens of workers inside a secure, glass-encased
room fed them into the "GEMS server," a gleaming silver Dell desktop computer
that tallies the votes.
Then at 10 p.m., the server suddenly froze up and stopped counting
votes. Cuyahoga County technicians clustered around the computer,
debating what to do. A young, business-suited employee from Diebold—the company
that makes the voting machines used in Cuyahoga—peered
into the screen and pecked at the keyboard. No one could figure out
what was wrong. So, like anyone faced with a misbehaving computer, they
simply turned it off and on again. Voilà: It started working—until an
hour later, when it crashed a second time. Again, they rebooted. By the
wee hours, the server mystery still hadn't been solved.
Worse was yet to come. When the votes were finally tallied the next
day, 10 races were so close that they needed to be recounted. But when
Platten went to retrieve paper copies of each vote—generated by the
Diebold machines as they worked—she discovered that so many printers
had jammed that 20 percent of the machines involved in the recounted
races lacked paper copies of some of the votes. They weren't lost,
technically speaking; Platten could hit "print" and a machine would
generate a replacement copy. But she had no way of proving that these
replacements were, indeed, what the voters had voted. She could only
hope the machines had worked correctly.
Click here to keep reading:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/06/magazine/06Vote-t.html
Then sign our urgent petition for paper ballots
before the
November election. Just click here to add your name:
http://pol.moveon.org/paper2008/o.pl?id=11873-5644579-jrPO70&t=5
Sources:
1. "Can You Count on Voting Machines?," The
New York Times Magazine, January 6, 2008
http://www.nytimes.com/magazine/
2. "Rep. Holt To Offer New Election Reform Proposal," National Journal Tech Daily, December 10, 2007
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=3310&id=&id=11873-5644579-jrPO70&t=6
3. "Can You Count on Voting Machines?," The
New York Times Magazine, January 6, 2008
http://www.nytimes.com/magazine/
4. "Rep. Rush Holt to Push for Paper Ballots and Vote Count Audits for 2008,"
AlterNet, December 27, 2007
http://www.alternet.org/democracy/71608/
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Received on Fri Jan 11 16:16:31 2008
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