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A firewall for democracy

Two California secretaries of state have refused to certify a touch-screen voting machine, and for good reason.

August 04, 2005|Andrew Gumbel, ANDREW GUMBEL is a U.S. correspondent for the London newspaper the Independent and author of "Steal This Vote: Dirty Elections and the Rotten History of Democracy in America," just published by Nation Books.

BRUCE MCPHERSON, California's secretary of state, has just performed an invaluable service for the voters. Only a few months into the job, he had been under intense pressure to certify the latest electronic touch-screen voting machine manufactured by Diebold Election Systems, which is supposed to help California counties meet a federally mandated January deadline for the overhaul of their election equipment. But instead of rolling over, his office conducted exhaustive tests on the Diebold TSx, discovered that it had a 10% error rate -- worse than the reviled punch-card machines used in Florida in 2000 -- and sent the company back to the drawing board.


For The Record
Los Angeles Times Monday August 22, 2005 Home Edition California Part B Page 11 Editorial Pages Desk 2 inches; 69 words Type of Material: Correction
Voting machines: An Aug. 4 Op-Ed article about electronic voting said California election officials' recent tests on Diebold touch-screen machines produced a 10% error rate, worse than the punch-card machines used in Florida's November 2000 election. The error rate that the state found referred to the number of machines that had screen freezes or paper jams. Diebold says that no votes were miscast or ruled invalid in the process.


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This is hugely important for two reasons.

First, because companies such as Diebold have been operating far too long without adequate public oversight, while charging taxpayers tens of millions of dollars for equipment that some of the country's best computer scientists have found is sloppily programmed, dangerously insecure and virtually unable to be audited for fraud or error.

The TSx, which is fitted with an independent paper trail to make recounts possible, was waved through the hazily regulated federal certification process and was deemed to have passed muster in Utah, Ohio and a handful of other states. None appear to have noticed the paper-jamming and screen-freeze problems picked up in the California tests.

McPherson's decision is also significant because the same line of Diebold machines has now been refused certification by California secretaries of state from both major parties. McPherson is a Republican, and his predecessor, Kevin Shelley, who cracked down on Diebold last year after the company admitted shortcomings that included the use of uncertified software, is a Democrat. That shows the vulnerabilities of the electoral process are not, at heart, a question of partisan politics. Rather, this is about the integrity of this nation's democratic infrastructure.

The county officials who have succumbed to the lure of paperless touch-screen machines need to be held accountable for their lavish spending on cutting-edge technology that, fears about hacking aside, clearly isn't built very well.

Extraordinarily, many election officials still claim that the touch-screen machines sold by Diebold, Sequoia and their competitors are miracle machines guaranteeing flawless elections. Maryland's Linda Lamone, president of the National Assn. of State Election Directors, told a public hearing in Pasadena last week that e-voting skeptics were scaremongers unduly influenced by "sensationalized newspaper articles."

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