With midterm elections coming up and
the entire Trump agenda at stake, be you for it or agin' it, the
puzzle of securing our elections from hacking has been
solved.
It doesn't matter if you believe the greatest threat is from the
Russkies or from inside the US. Few any longer disagree that there is
a problem.
Politicians from Tulsi Gabbard to Rep. Mark Pocan [D-WI-2] have been
aiming at the mark but missing. Gabbard has submitted HR5147,
the Securing America's Elections Act. Pocan has filed HR1562 the
Secure America's Future Elections Act or the SAFE Act. What they both
miss is the easiest, cheapest way to verify the vote counts from
hackable vote-counting machines.
Such a flurry of activity in Washington usually means voters have
forced politicians to take notice of a problem, but the politicians
don't really want to fix it. If they had wanted to fix it, it would be
fixed. It's not rocket science.
For one thing, Gabbard's bill does not require a hand-marked paper
ballot option for voters, which provides the best audit trail and the
most incontrovertible evidence of a voter's intentions. Some states
and voting jurisdictions, like Georgia,
are attempting to transition to "verifiable paper trail" voting, where
a voter uses a touch screen device to select his or her choices. The
voter can then examine the choices on a paper "receipt" on a roll of
tape in the machine. The problem is, first, no one ever examines the
roll, and second, the machine vote count is easy to hack, as is the
tape.
Neither bill, Gabbard's nor Pocan's, solves the problem.
But first, it is necessary to back up. In order to understand the
solution, you need to understand how
vote-counting machines work in most of
America.
After the 2000 presidential fiasco, most states moved to voter-marked
paper ballots, with exceptions such as touch screen machines noted
above. Make a long story short, most voting in the US is done by paper
ballot, hand-marked by the voter, and counted by "electronic eye"
optical scan vote-counting machine. This is a sound way of
vote-counting, as long as all cross-checks and audit trails are in
place.
The problem is, they are not.
What few people understand, but more are
beginning to, is that when a paper ballot is fed into an optical
scan vote counting machine, the machine takes a digital image of each
ballot, at lightning speed, then stores it into memory. One of the
audit trails in these machines is these ballot
images.
Even better, the jurisdictions which do not have these
state-of-the-art vote counting machines have machines which are
rapidly reaching end-of-service-life obsolescence. They should have
been replaced by now. The fact is any machine which does not take and
store a digital image of each ballot is an obsolete machine, including
all touch screen machines, except as they are allowed for handicapped
use.
Let's get this right: Yes, after every election, in most voting
jurisdictions across the US, inside of each precinct's paper ballot
vote-counting machine's memory is a digital image file of each ballot.
Where such machines are used. These images can then be posted online
or burned onto a DVD by the county, town, or city.
Elections experts have realized that the import of this little known
audit feature is enormous.
Making these ballot images publicly available would allow citizens who
wish to verify the vote-counting machine's total, to do it themselves.
As the last year has shown, it is notoriously difficult to force
election authorities to hand-count the paper ballots. Even with the $7
million raised by Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein for a
three-state recount of the Trump vs. Clinton vote, she still did not
get a full hand recount of all the paper ballots available.
Any citizen who likes can discover whether or not the Russkies are at
it again, as far as hacking into vote-counting machines and altering
the vote, which hackers have repeatedly demonstrated is easy to do.
One of the most recent instances was the DefCon
Hacker's Conference in Las Vegas last year,
when hackers just for funsies broke into voting machines in under 90
minutes.
At this point the discerning reader might ask: Say what? You mean we
could verify these elections ourselves all along? So why hasn't it
happened? More than 50% of precincts have this
feature.
The short answer is, election activists have ben trying to make it
happen, but election authorities are fighting it tooth and nail.
Apparently, your local county and state election authorities want to
make it easy for the Russkies to get away with swinging American
elections.
In Arizona, Pima County Elections Director Brad Nelson went to court to block
citizens from preserving, nevermind having
access to, the ballot images. Nelson argued that the county has the
authority to destroy this part of the
election record and audit trail, a view the judge vehemently disagreed
with.
In Alabama, the Secretary of State successfully obtained a state Supreme Court order to allow local election officials to destroy the ballot images. And in Massachusetts, Secretary of State William Galvin reportedly directed all local election authorities to destroy the digital ballot image audit trail. This is according to the election chief of a large Massachusetts city. Calls to the Secretary's office to confirm or deny this have not been returned.
The cat is out of the bag on the digital ballot images, and election authorities don't like it.
We can only scratch our heads as to
why election authorities have adopted this stance. Preserving and
posting the ballot images costs next to nothing, is easy, and violates
no principles of the secret ballot. All ballot images are completely
anonymous, and cannot be traced to any individual voter. Nevertheless,
apparently there are things election authorities do not want people to
see.
Underscoring the wisdom of preserving the digital ballot images, in a
high-profile, hotly contested Democratic primary between Bernie
Sanders protege Tim Canova, a Florida law school professor, and US
Representative Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, former chairman of the DNC,
after losing the election Canova discovered problems with the vote.
Not least of which was that there were almost 1000 more cast ballots
than voters who voted.
When Canova called for a hand recount of the paper ballots, he discovered that Broward County Supervisor of Elections Brenda Snipes had ordered the paper ballots in the race destroyed, illegally, in violation of federal statute requiring the ballots in federal races to be kept for two years. There was nothing to recount.
Wasserman-Schultz is a Clinton acolyte, and was forced to resign as chairman of the DNC when leaked emails revealed her lack of neutrality in the 2016 presidential primary race, in favor of Clinton.
It is not clear whether or not Snipes also ordered the digital ballot images destroyed. Broward County uses the kind of machines which make them. But the value of having them available as a backup to determine what actually happened in the race is obvious.
The Canova - Wasserman-Schultz race, in which Wasserman won by a landslide, uncovered a disturbing possibility. Canova, perhaps more alert than the typical candidate to the possibility of cheating, found strong evidence of it, and had his suspicions all but confirmed by the outrageous actions of election authorities. But in how many instances has such behavior not been uncovered? How many of our congressmen now sitting making laws for us, and for corporations, have no legitimacy whatsoever?
Preserving and posting the ballot images, where they are available,
solves a number of problems all at once. Election authorities rightly
cannot allow just anyone to paw through the paper ballots, and so
state laws for hand recounts are strict and usually require a court
order. Courts in turn have shown themselves loath to grant them. In
most states, automatic recounts are not triggered unless a candidate
loses by less than one-half of one percent, an overly restrictive and
arbitrary hurdle. Indeed, it has been asked, what is the point of
using paper ballots if no one is ever allowed to see them?
But digital ballot images cannot get coffee spilled on them, or get
lost by improper handling. Citizens can verify the results of precinct
machine counts to their heart's content, in case the Russians, as we
are told, are at it again.
The question is do politicians really want to secure our elections, or merely look like they are "doing something?"
There are other reforms which are necessary in order to truly protect every citizen's right to vote, and as importantly, to have that vote properly counted.
The trend toward mail-in ballots is viewed warily by election integrity experts. Nothing cries for mischief like stacks of marked ballots sitting in offices weeks before an actual election. Voter suppression must be halted by mandating a minimum number of voting stations per thousand registered voters, to eliminate long lines often seen in poorer inner city neighborhoods. Voter registration systems must be secured to eliminate the kind of registration hacking we saw in numerous 2016 Democratic presidential primaries, such as New York and Arizona.
DRE - Direct Recording Electronic voting machines, in other words screen touch - should be banned with the exception of use for persons with disabilities.
Some states, such as South Carolina, host to an important early presidential primary, still have completely paperless electronic voting, what election experts call "push and pray."
But any bill which does not codify a mandate to preserve and post the
digital ballot images, and to require jurisdictions to transition
their now obsolete machines to one which generates them, is window
dressing. The saying is as true as ever: Never listen to what
politicians say. Watch what politicians do.