Doth The Courant Protest Too Much?

Perhaps there is one thing worse than a voting system we cannot trust, outsourced, and unaudited. It is a media we cannot trust, downsized, outsourced, bent only on profits, oligarchical, and failing to actually do the work necessary to do the research and reporting necessary for democracy.

Updates:

Brad Friedman defends us all against false accusations <read>
Sometimes its politically correct to believe the exit polls <read>

NH Secretary of State’s Press Release On Recount
Starting 1/16: <read>
Dennis Kucinich statement: <read>
Oberman + Rush Holt, Excellent Video <watch>
Will the recount be satisfactory? Questions raised <read>

Perhaps there is one thing worse than a voting system we cannot trust, outsourced, and unaudited. It is a media we cannot trust, downsized, outsourced, bent only on profits, oligarchical, and failing to actually do the work necessary to do the research and reporting necessary for democracy.

Englehart  Cartoon 1/11/2008

As I have written on Englehart’s Comments at the Courant:

It seems from the Courant articles and editorial yesterday, and now this cartoon, that the machines are infallible and the past proven accuracy of polls is completely disregarded.

The cartoon should be showing the Crystal Ball as a Diebold optical scanner and a trusting media expressing complete faith in its unchecked results.

There are legitimate questions about the discrepancy between the polls and the machines. The way to resolve these questions is not through faith, but through science by actually counting the paper.

There is no proof the machines were inaccurate. There is no proof the polls are inaccurate. What there is, is an absence of solid investigation to give us confidence.

Yesterday we had a flurry in the Courant all focused on the idea that the polls were wrong. Two articles, the lead editorial, an op-ed, and four letters to the editor:

Big Loser In N.H. Race: The Pollsters <read> Where with no evidence arguments are developed to explain the discrepancies in the polls – except any acknowledgement of the possibility that the machines did not count accurately.

Clinton’s ‘Cry’ Resounds in Presidential Campaign <read> Where the argument that it was Clinton’s crying that moved the voters.

Editorial: Only Pollsters Are Upset <read> Confirming the case made in the earlier articles. Surprisingly the Courant ignores all the voting advocates that are concerned with the lack of auditing of the machines and the unanswered questions. I would say we are not surprised at the lack of investigation yet we are more than concerned with the state of election integrity <read> <read> and the media’s rush to judgement.

Letters to the Editor <read> Four letters to the editor, in their own box in the print edition serve to reinforce the same theme.

Op-Ed: Is U.S. Ready For Obama <read> An op-ed, more than hinting that the voters in N.H. are racist and lied to the pollsters to cover that up.

Remember that the Courant Editorial Board has a reputation to keep. They must stick to their earlier claim that “So far, no one appears to have figured out how to tamper with the machines”. <read> Completely discrediting the vast majority of computer scientists, the Carter-Baker Commission, the Brennan Center for Justice, the Secretary of the State of California, and Dr. Shvartsman and his team at the UConn Voter Center.

Update: David Lindorf article <read>

Jonathan Simon, an attorney and co-founder of the group Election Defense Alliance, says that the vote discrepancies between machine and hand counts in New Hampshire’s Democratic primary are troubling, and defy easy explanation.

“The trouble is, whenever you have a surprise result in an election, and it runs counter to the polls, the media always say the problem is the polling, not the counting.” But he adds, “The thing is, these things always work in one direction-in favor of the more conservative candidate, and that defies the law of quantum mechanics.”

DemocracyNow! Interviews New York Times Author

<read, listen, view> More scary and devastating than reading the article in the New York Times Magazine.

Still does not fully address the similar issues of optical scan which are only solved with sufficient post-election audits. Yes, recounts of the paper from optical scan is vary reassuring, yet recounts are seldom done, even in cases of important suspicions, like the recent New Hampshire Primary. Precisely why we need post-election audits.

This interview does more fully cover the issues of outsourcing.

NH Exit Polls Agree With Pre-Election Polls

Chris Mathews confirms that exit polls also had Obama beating Clinton by 8%.  Brad Friedman covers the story: <read>

Even the Exit Polls showed that Obama should have won, according to Chris Matthews on Hardball today. It’s the first specific indication that we’ve seen that the raw, unadjusted Exit Poll data, which only corporate mainstream media folks, not mere mortals, are allowed to see, confirmed all of the pre-election polling which predicted an Obama win.

Brad also explains falacy of dailykos entry <read>

Discussing why things like actually counting the ballots in New Hampshire would have been a great idea. And on the lunacy and self-destructiveness of progressives (like this uninformed front-pager over at dKos, and his even lesser-informed followers, such as Markos himself) buying into the conspiracy theory that the dozens of verified, independent, multiple-sourced pre-election polls were wrong, but the unverified and uncounted election results, as announced, are somehow magically known to be accurate.

Hacking Our Voting Machines and The Perils Of Outsourcing

Bev Harris has a new video on UTube showing the Hursti Hack in Florida with Ion Sancho and some testimony in New Hampshire by Hari Hursti and John Silvestro. John Silvestro is President of LHS Associates the Diebold distributor in that programs all our elections in Connecticut in secret in Massachusetts. Apparently in New Hampshire also uses LHS to program their elections. We take a few more precautions here but are subject to the same risks. <video>

Here is the accompanying article from BlackBoxVoting <read>

Update: Read more on Mr. Silvestro’s views of outsourcing <read>

My opinion is yes because I feel very confident that the process itself is better left in the private thing than it is in the public venue when I see the influence that each political party can put on people and make things happen in this country whether right or wrong, I mean if you think about it and I’d ask you the same way. Would you like politically connected people to vote parties, to be in charge of running you know the process of creating voting machines, counting ballots and you know would you like that? I don’t know…

Update: Food for thought from Brad Friedman <read>

NH Primary: Pre-Election Polls Wildly Different Than Results Announced for Clinton/Obama
Other Pre-Election Numbers, For Republicans and Rest of Dems, Nearly Dead on the Money…

the pre-election pollster’s numbers (NOTE: that’s not Exit Polls, but Pre-Election Polls!) were dead-on, for the most part, on the Republican side, as well as on the Democratic side. Except in the do-or-die (for Hillary) Clinton v. Obama race. I’m watching MSNBC right now, and they all seem to agree that the results, for the moment, defy explanation.

While I have no evidence at this time — let me repeat, no evidence at this time — of chicanery, what we do know is that chicanery, with this particular voting system, is not particularly difficult. Particularly when one private company — and a less-than-respectable one at that, as I detailed in the previous post — runs the entire process.

I strongly suggest you go over to the original article at Brad Blog and at least read the graphs. The whole post is well worth reading. There are legitimate questions here which need answers, for instance: Why do journalists accept exit polls as explanations for why people voted a certain way but reject counter conclusions of those same exit polls? I will echo Brad that we don’t have enough data to determine answers here, nobody may ever have access to the necessary data such as original paper ballots under a reliable chain of custody. Let me also echo myself, the Carter-Baker Commission, and the Brennan Center for Justice that it only takes a very small number of people to change an electronic election – not a conspiracy. Yet, perhaps it would take a conspiracy to avoid a convincing analysis of the actual data.

Greenwich Complains: Democracy Too Much Work. Too Expensive.

We often hear election officials and politicians lamenting the lack of participation in Democracy, especially in Connecticut. We also hear that our late primary leaves us out of the process of selecting the Presidential candidates. Secretary Bysiewicz, to the appreciation of many, has led the charge to move our primary to February from March.

Not so in Greenwich, where the registrars seem to be growing weary of paying the price and baring the burdens of Democracy, aggravated by frustration in finding willing help wintering in town:

Continue reading “Greenwich Complains: Democracy Too Much Work. Too Expensive.”

New York Times: Can You Count On Voting Machines?

New York Times Magazine article today, Can You Count On Voting Machines? <read>

This is a large, significant article primarily focused on touch screen voting machines. Hailed by advocates as significant because the New York Times is recognizing problems with voting machines. Yet, also criticized by advocates for selective quotes and statements that do not accurately portray the complete picture. Overall the thrust of the article is scary and accurate, however, there are areas that could provide quotes that would lead to a false impression of security. Full coverage follows below. Continue reading “New York Times: Can You Count On Voting Machines?”

Rush Holt: Confidence In Voting Act of 2008

Will the third Act be the charm? Rush Holt to introduce the “Confidence In Voting Act of 2008”.

As drafted, CTVotersCount.org fully supports the bill and will work for its passage. (Read on for our reasons for supporting this bill and what it means for Connecticut)

Thursday Alternet reported Rep. Rush Holt to Push for Paper Ballots and Vote Count Audits for 2008 <read>. In early Fruday afternoon Brad Friedman followed up with Holt Takes Another Stab At Election Reform <read> and a <.pdf draft> of the proposed bill

The First Act

At least two years ago Representative Rush Holt introduced a bill to require paper ballots and audits of Federal elections. In the spring of 2006 I joined a group of citizens from across the country for two lobby days sponsored by Verified Voting, Common Cause, and VoteTrust USA to meet with representatives to urge co-sponsorship of the original “Holt bill”. I joined the New England delegation lobbying the five of the six representatives from New England (four from CT and two from MA) who had not signed on as one of the 169 co-sponsors. Some signed on immediately, some in a few weeks, and in one district only after the 2006 election. The eventual result was co-sponsorship by more than 220 representatives and by each of the five representatives from Connecticut.

Continue reading “Rush Holt: Confidence In Voting Act of 2008”

New York Times: Broken Polls

New York Times Editorial, Broken Polls <read>

Election officials hate to admit how vulnerable their voting systems are to errors and vote theft. ..
Election officials across the country should be asking the sort of tough questions Ms. Brunner and Mr. Coffman have. In 2000, the nation only confronted the flaws in its voting technology after a presidential election was irreparably harmed. With just under a year to go before the next presidential election, the time to fix these problems is now.

History Lesson from Bob Fitrakis: 1980, 1984, 1988

Bob Fitrakis is author of How the GOP Stole America’s 2004 Election & Is Rigging 2008, with Harvey Wasserman. He has an interesting blog post covering recent history of electronic election suspicions.

It is 1984 plus 1980 and 1988. It is not George Orwell fiction, but George Bush reality.

Behind Every Bush — There’s A Rigged Election <read> Excerpts below:

Take the following quote from the Manchester Union Leader from the 1980 Iowa caucus: “The Bush operation has all the smell of a CIA covert operation . . . strange aspects of the Iowa operation [include] a long, slow count and then the computers broke down at a very convenient point, with Bush having a six percent bulge over Reagan.”

In 1984, President Reagan signed National Security Directive Decision NSDD245. A year later, the New York Times explained the details of Reagan’s secret directive: “A branch of the National Security Agency is investigating whether a computer program that counted more than one-third of all the votes cast in the United States in 1984 is vulnerable to fraudulent manipulation.”

The actual computer voting machines were introduced on a grand scale in New Hampshire’s 1988 primary. The results are predictable – former CIA director George H. W. Bush wins a huge upset over Dole and the mainstream for-profit corporate media refuses to consider election rigging.

Here’s the Washington Post’s account of the bizarre and unexplainable election results when touchscreens were first used: In 1988, H.W. Bush was trailing Dole by 8 points in the last Gallup poll before the New Hampshire primary. Bush won by 9 points. The Washington Post covered the Bush upset with the following headline: “Voters Were a Step Ahead of Tracking Measurements.”

Diebold/Primier DOJ Investigation, CO and CA Conflicts Of Interest

Another excellent report by Brad Friedman covering the DOJ investigation of Diebold/Premier along with a blatant conflict of interest by the Secretary of State of Colorado <read>

Excerpts below. Continue reading “Diebold/Primier DOJ Investigation, CO and CA Conflicts Of Interest”