Another Election, Another Slew of Voting Machine Glitches
An anonymous reader writes: As Election Day in the U.S. starts to wind down, reports from around the country highlight another round of technological failures at the polls. In Virginia, the machines are casting votes for the wrong candidates. In North Carolina, polling sites received the wrong set of thumb drives, delaying voters for hours. In Michigan, software glitches turned voters away in the early morning, including a city mayor. A county in Indiana saw five of its polling sites spend hours trying to get the machines to boot correctly. And in Connecticut, an as-yet-unspecified computer glitch caused a judge to keep the polls open for extra time. When are we going to get this right?
I have voted in over twenty elections using optical scan, and there have never been any problems. If there were problems they can be fixed by a manual recount.
As for the other problems you mention, they have nothing to do with paper vs. electronic. It's just bad organization.
Here's how we do it where I vote. You walk into the polling place, and you tell the nice old lady your address, She looks up your address on a paper printout, and when she finds it you tell her your name and she crosses it off with a red pencil and hands you your ballot. You go into the voting booth, which is nothing but a curtained aluminum frame with a table in it; the table contains a stack of markers. You mark off your ballot, go to the exit desk where the address and name procedure is duplicated with another nice old lady. Then you drop your ballot into a dropped box under the watchful gaze of a policeman. When the polls close the printouts go into another locked box and it's all driven over to the counting center under police guard.
There's literally nothing technological to screw up voting, counting or recounting, except that every polling place has to have a special machine for visually impaired voters. If that goes wrong the procedure is to bring a trusted person to fill out your ballot.
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