How will you and your state cast ballots in November?
- added September 05, 2008
- 24 responses
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- goldenways
- added this
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- related topics
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- Tech (8175)
- Election 2008 (5455)
- US (4761)
- Democracy (611)
- Voting (459)
- Voting Machines (33)
When new systems are used, problems often arise either with the equipment itself or with election officials and voters who are unfamiliar with it.
To see what equipment you and your state will be using in November and to familiarize yourself with it before the election, VerifiedVoting.org, an election integrity group that led the movement to get voter-verified paper audit trails added to touch-screen voting machines, has produced a comprehensive interactive map identifying the voting systems being used in election districts across the country. As far as I know, this is the most up-to-date list of voting equipment that exists.
The map offers several options for viewing. You can look at systems at a statewide macro level or click on a state to get a micro view of the various systems being used in each county or voting district, including the accessible equipment being offered for disabled voters. At the district level, you'll also find information about the maker of the voting machines and contact information for the election office.
The voting machine landscape has changed a lot since the 2000 presidential election when punch-card voting systems and dangling chads spawned a heated national debate and Supreme Court battle.
As a result of the 2000 debacle, the Help America Vote Act was passed in 2002 allocating federal funds to replace antiquated punch-card and lever machines with newer election technologies. Election officials quickly spent millions of dollars to buy paperless touch-screen voting machines -- also known as Direct Recording Electronic (DRE) machines -- that were touted by their makers as faster, more accurate and easier to use than punch-card machines.
But in 2003, technical reports began surfacing about serious security issues with the machines as well as reports about breakdowns and other problems. Public opinion has forced some voting districts to back away from the equipment since then. In some cases entire states -- such as California and Florida -- have outlawed DRE machines for use by anyone other than disabled voters and have recently replaced their touch-screen systems with new optical-scan machines.
In the last two years, 131 counties across 9 states -- California, Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Kentucky, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Virginia -- have abandoned their DRE machines in favor of paper ballot voting systems, according to statistics collected by VerifiedVoting.
While some states like Nevada and Utah have added paper trails to their DRE machines, the District of Columbia and six states -- Delaware, Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland, New Jersey and South Carolina -- still use DRE's without paper trails statewide. A handful of other states use mixed systems -- paperless DREs in some districts and paper-based voting systems in other districts.
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- goldenways
- 3 months ago
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Here in Cali, we're getting there...
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This is a shame if not a crime. The FEC should require a paper trail in all national elections. It might not stop certain elements from committing fraud an stealing elections but it would certainly curtail it.
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- bluestranger
- 3 months ago
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Excellent post.
This should make for and interesting election. Hopefully we will be able to keep a handle on the cheating this time. Although with the media coverage being as it has been (excluding Fox News) I don't see this being a close election anyway.
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Hopefully Absentee Ballot so they will all be counted and no one gets turned away from the voting Polls.
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We all know the rebuplicans fix elections and vote tallys.
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- intelligenceisacurse
- 3 months ago
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Here in WA state we have mail-in voting, except for King and Pierce counties (Seattle and Tacoma, respectively. The state is fairly safe Obama country. During our caucuses he beat Sen Clinton in every county by an average of 3 to 1. Current polling has Obama over McCain by 11 points.
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- ProgressiveBum
- 3 months ago
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Does any thinking person have faith in the voting process anymore? The very essance of what is America. Where is the outrage?
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- phoenixtoo
- 3 months ago
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Isn't it funny that you can do all of your banking through a Diebold banking machine including deposits, balance transfers and withdrawals, yet the same company does not produce a voting machine that can give you a paper trail?
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The only people with any "faith" in the voting process are Repulicans. They already know the outcome. It is astonishing to me that so many people are blind to this fact.
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- cantucwearebrothers
- 3 months ago
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At this year's state convention, Massachusetts' Democratic Party amended their platform to be against the use of for-profit voting machine companies.
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Change is good, but should there have been a pliot period, where they are new voting systems? So that voters can be familarize with the new voting system. This would make sense.
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we'll cast our ballot and it'll be locked up in a warehouse in the state capitol while diebold collects millions of dollars in payoff money to shit on our democracy.
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- diabolical44
- 3 months ago
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Oregon; we vote by mail, no polling place hassel's, registration is easily checked by signatures. are votes are counted. Proud too say we voted Bush down in 2000, 2004.
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- kennymotown
- 3 months ago
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e-voting is dodgier than "Good enough", the 1994 UK hit single by Dodgy.
A simple tick or number on a piece of paper is all thats needed
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- Owwmykneecap
- 3 months ago
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In Oregon we have the most perfect way of voting. All people have the option of mailing in their ballots. Voting should not interfere with living your normal life.
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- sublimeuniverse
- 3 months ago
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It's a shame to see so many places with electronic machines and no voter verified paper audit trail printers. It appears as if i will have to vote on one this november. i'll be sure to complain to someone there about the machines if this will be the case.
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The Electoral College does more harm than voting machines ever could. In every state, except Maine and Nebraska, the minority vote is discarded. I'm going to vote, but my state will decidedly vote in favor of the opposing candidate, and that candidate will receive every electoral vote from my state. My vote is worthless. It's only a symbol at this point.

