Napa activists focus on e-voting, 'Hacking Democracy'
By CARLOS VILLATORO
Register Staff Writer
Electronic voting machines will be on the sidelines when Californians hit the polls Nov. 4.
Many advocates believe that’s a good thing as they work toward what they believe is a more fair and transparent voting system.
Over the weekend, a group of concerned citizens gathered at the Napa Boys and Girls Club to express concerns with the integrity of electronic voting machines and to call for reliance on a paper ballot system.
The group, comprised mostly of members of Unitarian Universalist church, explored the problems with electronic voting machines as documented in the 2006 film “Hacking Democracy.” The film focuses on the 2000 presidential election results in Volusia County, Fla.. An electronic voting machine there reported that Al Gore received negative 16,022 votes, according to the film.
Officials were unable to prove that election fraud had occurred, but the incident generated mistrust of the machines.
Joanne Gifford, facilitator at the event Sunday, said that the film proves that electronic voting machines can be tampered with and hacked. She said that switching to a paper ballot system would prevent would-be hackers from being able to change the outcome of an election.
“We got big problems and it has to be a top-down fix,” Gifford said. “We just don’t have an equitable (voting) system.”
“We should question the voting system,” Napa resident William Somerville said. “The last two presidents didn’t receive the majority of votes and the majority amount of electoral votes.”
Their message has a sympathetic ear in California Secretary of State Debra Bowen, who earlier this year ordered counties that had used electronic voting machines — including Napa — to go back to paper systems.
Napa County Registrar of Voters John Tuteur was a critic of Bowen’s decision. Tuteur has pointed out that paper voting systems also have security flaws and states that claims regarding the unreliability of e-votes are overstated.
Gifford urged the four-person group to write letters to Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., and Rep. Mike Thompson, D-St. Helena, urging them to author legislation pushing for a paper ballot voting system.
Aside from electronic voting machines, the group discussed myriad problems at the polls.
“What clearly exists is something called voter suppression,” Gifford said, referring to tactics that discourage voters from going to the polls.
Gifford said voter suppression efforts can include reducing the number of voting machines in targeted districts, opting not to make voter information available in different languages and propagating misinformation about who’s allowed to vote.
The November election, in which a record number of voters are expected to participate, will certainly stir more debate on the best methods for casting ballots.
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kevin wrote on Aug 27, 2008 4:50 AM:
Rich wrote on Aug 27, 2008 6:44 AM:
kbf wrote on Aug 27, 2008 8:03 AM:
Why would you need voter information in any language other than english? In order to vote I thought you had to be a citizen and in order to do that you have to read and write english.
Insted of complaining and trying to stir up trouble how about sitting down with Mr. Tuter and dissicusing your concerns. He is always available, I've called with concerns or questions and he has always been there to help. I for one was unhappy to see the machines leave. I think paper has just as many problems.
Ms. Gifford left one problem out and that is the canidates people at the polls intimidating voters. "
MP wrote on Aug 27, 2008 9:59 AM:
freeport56 wrote on Aug 27, 2008 10:33 AM:
I know the Dems like the paper ballot because they can be easily manipulated. "
msinformd wrote on Aug 27, 2008 10:58 AM:
Ruff Limblog wrote on Aug 27, 2008 11:47 AM:
Neither can any poll worker.
YES, an election can be stolen 'invisibly' with polling workers sitting 'right there'.
The idea that people who want a receipt when they put $20 in the bank ATM should trust voting machines that have been tested and found deficient is ridiculous.
However, like the 'filibuster' is only OK when Republicans do it, the Republican-enablers think that crooked voting machines are OK as long as they are the benficiaries.
It wasn't so long ago that one of 'their guys' lost in Napa and you could hear the wailing and whining in Bangor, Maine.
~Ruff "
winghunter wrote on Aug 27, 2008 12:02 PM:
funnyme wrote on Aug 27, 2008 12:15 PM:
How many of those do you know?
Oh. Never mind.
There's those who just come across the border to have babies, get the birth certificate of US citizenship and go back home to come back eighteen years later just to vote.
Yep. That's it. "
raybo wrote on Aug 27, 2008 12:59 PM:
freeport56 wrote on Aug 27, 2008 1:21 PM:
Simple easy and clean to stop voter fraud. We could even make the ballots like the absentee ballots, just draw a line. "
ADark1 wrote on Aug 27, 2008 5:03 PM:
Raven wrote on Aug 27, 2008 9:33 PM:
Ruff Limblog wrote on Aug 28, 2008 12:22 AM:
Crooked voting machines are OK, but not having a CDL is just horrible!
~Ruff "