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Maryland Activists Want E-Voting Receipts

 By Robert MacMillan
washingtonpost.com Staff Writer
Monday, July 19, 2004; 12:50 PM

Melanie Vaughan-West arrived at the Maryland State House in Annapolis last Tuesday to demand something she never had before a receipt for her vote.

The pastor of the nearby Broadneck Baptist Church gathered with approximately 100 other people in front of the state capitol to add her voice to the small-but-growing chorus of complaints that electronic touch-screen voting machines are more susceptible to fraud and manipulation than their paper-based predecessors.

"They're not dependable," she said. "There are so many things that can go wrong."

A piece of paper taped to Vaughan-West's back read, "Will your vote count?" Others carried picket signs and wore pins saying, "Make sure your vote counts demand a paper ballot," and "Don't let the computer eat your vote."

One man wore a black box, with his head and feet sticking out at either end, designed to look like a computer screen with a gaping maw, fangs and malevolent eyes, ready to swallow votes on Election Day.

They sweated through a dank, cloudy July afternoon on the little square at Lawyer's Mall as activists predicted that e-voting machines could result in lost votes and a compromised election this November.

The event, organized by the Maryland-based Campaign for Verifiable Voting, was part of the "Computer Ate My Vote" day, which saw activists gather in 19 states to call on their governors and state election boards to require that touchscreen electronic voting machines produce a paper record of each vote cast.

Supporters of the machines tout them as the most secure method of voting ever created, far more reliable than the punch-card machines that contributed to the 2000 election debacle in Florida. Congress felt the same way, and handed out $3.9 billion to the states to bring their voting technology into the electronic age by 2006. Some states, including Maryland, acted swiftly to their systems. Many other states are making the change more slowly, moving county by county or even precinct by precinct.

Some of that hesitancy stems from the fact that federal officials have not yet developed uniform methods for how the machines would handle recounts and other routine election hiccups, and they are unlikely to come before November. That, opponents say, could sow chaos and confusion in the voting process if a candidate demanded a recount.

"We know that voting with a paperless black-box machine is like buying a pig in a poke," said Ben Cohen, co-founder of the Ben & Jerry's ice cream empire and president of TrueMajority.org, a group opposed to paperless voting. Electronic voting, he said, is a gamble "with the very future of democracy."

The lead organizers of the rallies, TrueMajority.org and MoveOn.org, held a teleconference with former Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean, Cohen and other notable supporters of e-voting receipts. Dean said that the groups, including Common Cause, the Electronic Frontier Foundation and Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility, collected 350,000 signatures of Americans who are asking their state election boards to sign petitions promising to make alternate voting methods available this November.

"It's very encouraging to see how many Americans really believe that their votes are sacred," said Rep. Rush Holt (D-N.J.), one of the participants in the call. Holt is sponsoring legislation in the House of Representatives to require e-voting machines to produce a paper receipt. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) and John Ensign (R-Nev.) are sponsoring similar legislation in the Senate.

Demonstrations also took place in states such as Texas, North Carolina, New York, Ohio, Utah and Wisconsin. There also was a rally in California, where Secretary of State Kevin Shelley has led a high-profile effort to enforce tough standards on e-voting machines. Shelley also banned the use of one type of machine manufactured by Diebold Election Systems because he said it uses uncertified software.

Maryland Will Remain Paperless

In Annapolis, Linda Schade, co-founder of the Campaign for Verifiable Voting, said her group and several others had collected 13,000 signatures of Maryland citizens who want Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. (R) to require election officials to offer alternatives to touch-screen voting. She said the group also is calling on State Board of Elections chief Linda Lamone to resign because of her refusal to offer a paper ballot alternative.

Lamone, who has said in previous interviews that the Diebold machines are protected by multiple layers of security, did not return several telephone calls seeking comment on the Annapolis rally.

Retrofitting Maryland's voting machines to make them capable of printing a receipt would be feasible, according to David Bear, spokesman for Diebold Election Systems. But he said the company, which has sold more than 16,000 touch-screen machines to Maryland, would not change the machines unless Maryland officials request it. Bear declined to say how much it would cost to add printers, saying that it would depend on a variety of factors.

Dels. Karen Montgomery (D-14th) and Elizabeth Bobo (D-2nd), who attended the rally, said that they will ask Ehrlich to convene a special legislative session to consider requiring paper voting receipts. The General Assembly earlier this year failed to pass a measure requiring a ballot paper trail.

Ehrlich is seeking a special session to address medical malpractice lawsuits and in-state slot machines, but spokesman Henry Fawell said he has "not heard any discussion" about whether such a session would also consider electronic voting reform. The assembly has not held a special session since 1992.

Fawell said the "security and integrity of the machines and the voting environment" are Ehrlich's primary concerns, but that a report commissioned by the state and released in January concluded that the machines are reliable. That study, produced for the state by San Diego-based SAIC Corp., contrasts with a conflicting report issued by Johns Hopkins University professor Avi Rubin, which concluded that the code in the machines could be hijacked by someone seeking to change the election outcome.

The Maryland-based Campaign for Verifiable Voting is still contemplating its next move, said Schade. It has begun approaching civic associations, political clubs, houses of worship and other local groups to spread their message, and is considering suing to get printers attached to the machines.

Schade and several others, including state Sen. Andrew Harris (R) and Baltimore City Councilman Kwame Abayami (D), sued the elections board in April in an attempt to get the machines decertified following reports of voting glitches in the March 2 primary election. Several voters who demanded paper ballots received them, but they later learned from the elections board that their votes were invalidated. An Anne Arundel County Circuit Court judge will hear motions in the case on Thursday.

After the speeches and the applause at the Annapolis rally, the crowd shuffled from the small brick courtyard at Lawyer's Mall to the State House steps. The plan was to march up the stairs to the governor's office, where they would hand-deliver their 13,000-name petition.

In the end, they stayed outside and chanted ad hoc slogans while Dels. Bobo and Montgomery got a brief audience with Lt. Gov. Michael S. Steele (R). As it turned out, the governor's office would not accept the hand-delivered petitions for security reasons.

And Melanie Vaughan-West is considering what might be the only legal way to vote on paper this November: absentee ballot.



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