Litigating
the Election
By Marjorie Cohn
22
November 2004
Without much
fanfare, a number of lawyers are busy mounting court challenges to the
election. Lawsuits have been filed and other actions are being taken
in Ohio and Florida, the two key electoral states. Members of Congress
have demanded a General Accountability Office investigation of the election.
The largest Freedom of Information Act request in the nation's history
has been launched, and other efforts are in the works.
Is there substance
to these challenges? On Thursday, the University of California's Berkeley
Quantitative Methods Research Team released a statistical study - the
sole method available to monitor the accuracy of e-voting - reporting
irregularities associated with electronic voting machines may have awarded
130,000-260,000 or more excess votes to Bush in Florida. The three counties
where the voting anomalies were most prevalent were also the most heavily
Democratic: Broward, Palm Beach and Miami-Dade, respectively. The official
tally in Florida shows Bush with 380,978 more votes than Kerry.
Recount, Lawsuits,
Hearings in Ohio
Green Party
candidate David Cobb and Libertarian Party candidate Michael Badnarik
have sought a recount of the votes in Ohio. A demand for a recount can
only be filed by a presidential candidate who was on the ballot or a
certified write-in candidate. Alleged improprieties in Ohio include
mis-marked and discarded ballots, problems with electronic voting machines,
and the targeted disenfranchisement of African-American voters. Although
a recount doesn't typically begin until after the vote has been certified
(December 6), Cobb and Badnarik have asked for the recount to proceed
forthwith for fear there won't be sufficient time to complete the recount
in time for the December 13 date on which the Ohio presidential electors
will meet.
Bush now leads
Kerry by about 136,000 votes in Ohio. A battle is looming over nearly
155,000 provisional ballots, which might decide who really won the election.
The Ohio Democratic Party has joined a lawsuit by elector Audrey J.
Schering, which asks U.S. District Judge Michael H. Watson to order
Ohio Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell to impose uniform standards
for counting provisional ballots on all 88 counties. The lawsuit cites
the U.S. Supreme Court's opinion in Bush v. Gore, which "held that
the failure to provide specific standards for counting of ballots that
are sufficient to assure a uniform count statewide violates the Equal
Protection Clause of the United States Constitution." Attorney
Donald J. McTigue, who filed the suit, told me that although many of
the provisional ballots are being counted, his client is concerned about
those that are not being counted. Blackwell has provided only limited
instruction about which provisional ballots to count. But many doubts
remain about how different election boards determine whether someone
is a registered voter. Some may type the name in on a computer; others
may look for typographical errors; still others may look at the hard
copy. McTigue worries that there is no way of knowing what each board
is doing. Do they go back to the purged files? Were they properly purged?
Of the 11 counties
that had completed checking provisional ballots by Wednesday, 81 percent
have been ruled valid. McTigue expects the counting of provisional ballots
to last at least two more weeks.
On Election
Day, Sarah White filed a class action against Blackwell and the Board
of Elections of Lucas County, claiming they violated the Help America
Vote Act, passed in the wake of the 2000 election debacle, that gives
voters in federal elections a right to cast provisional ballots. White
claimed that although she requested an absentee ballot one month before
the election, she never received one. Blackwell ruled that persons who
had requested, but not received their absentee ballots, would not be
permitted to cast a provisional ballot. U.S. District Judge David A.
Katz, however, ordered that "the Board of Elections of Lucas County
shall immediately advise all precincts to issue provisional ballots
to those voters who appear at the voting place and assert their eligibility
to vote, including that the voter is a registered voter in the precinct
in which he or she desires to vote, and that the voter is eligible to
vote in an election for Federal office."
Last week, the
Ohio Election Protection Coalition held public hearings in Columbus.
Extensive sworn and written testimony of Ohio voters, precinct judges,
poll workers, legal observers, and party challengers revealed a widespread
and concerted effort by Blackwell to deny primarily African-American
and young voters the right to cast their ballots within a reasonable
time. Precincts were deprived of adequate numbers of voting machines,
so voters waited in lines from 2-7 hours, even though 68 electronic
voting machines remained in storage and were never used on Election
Day. Blackwell, who oversaw the election in Ohio, also served as co-chair
of the Ohio Bush-Cheney reelection campaign. Lawyers for the Ohio Election
Protection Coalition plan to use the testimony from the Columbus hearings
to challenge the results of Ohio's presidential vote in the state Supreme
Court next week.
Lawsuits in
Florida
On Election
Day, the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida and Florida Legal
Services sued Miami-Dade County and Broward County election officials
in U.S. District Court for denying voters sufficient time to mail in
absentee ballots. The Broward County Supervisor of Elections sent 13,300
absentee ballots to voters late. Plaintiffs Fay Friedman, Adam Meyer,
and Daniel Benhaim claimed the two counties violated the Civil Rights
Act of 1964 and the First and Fourteenth Amendments because they did
not receive their absentee ballots until Election Day, and it was therefore
impossible to comply with state law requiring persons who are out-of-state
but present in the U.S. to submit absentee ballots by 7 P.M. on Election
Day. Under Florida state law, a separate rule gives more time to absentee
voters outside the U.S., who may postmark their ballots by November
2 as long as the ballot arrives within 10 days after the election. JoNel
Newman, a Florida Legal Services attorney, says, "The rules governing
absentee ballots should apply equally to every voter, whether they are
temporarily in other parts of the country or overseas." On Tuesday,
U.S. District Court Judge Alan Gold denied plaintiffs' motion for a
preliminary injunction to include the late ballots in the final vote
tally; however, the lawsuit remains alive for trial on a request to
apply the late counting rule used for foreign absentees to domestic
ballots.
Opponents of
slot machines at South Florida pari-mutuels filed a lawsuit seeking
an official recount of about 78,000 absentee ballots cast in Broward
County on Amendment 4. About 94 percent of the new votes on the amendment
were "yes" and only 6 percent were "no," a "statistical
anomaly." No hearing has yet been scheduled on the case.
Recount in New
Hampshire
Pursuant to
a request by Ralph Nader, votes in some New Hampshire towns are being
recounted. An analysis showed wide differences in voting trends between
the 2000 and 2004 elections; about three quarters of precincts with
severe changes used Diebold optical scanning machines. Last week, Diebold
agreed to pay $2.6 million to settle a lawsuit with the state of California.
Diebold officials misled state leaders about the security and certification
of its products to get payments from the state, according to California
Attorney General Bill Lockyer. Diebold, which helped to count the Ohio
vote with e-voting machines and optical scan machines, is headed by
Republican CEO Wally O'Dell. Last year, O'Dell wrote to Ohio Republican
donors, saying he was "committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral
votes to the President next year."
Lawsuits Challenge
Mayoral Results in San Diego
Election results
in San Diego's mayoral race remain in doubt. The unofficial tally shows
Mayor Dick Murphy the victor. But write-in votes for Donna Frye have
been excluded because voters did not darken the oval on the left of
the line where they wrote in Frye's name. A lawsuit seeks to force the
county registrar of voters to count the excluded write-in votes, which
many believe will tip the results in her favor. Two other lawsuits are
attempting to have Frye's candidacy ruled illegal and force a runoff
between Murphy and Supervisor Ron Roberts. Frye ran on a platform critical
of Murphy's financial leadership and the culture of secrecy at City
Hall.
Congressmen
Request GAO Investigation
Three members
of Congress - John Conyers, Jr., Jerrold Nadler, and Robert Wexler -
wrote to the Government Accountability Office on November 5, requesting
an immediate investigation of the efficacy of voting machines and new
technologies used in the 2004 election, how election officials responded
to difficulties they encountered, and what we can do in the future to
improve our election systems and administration. The Congressmen cited
an electronic voting system in Columbus, Ohio, that gave Bush 4,000
extra votes; an electronic tally of a South Florida gambling ballot
initiative that failed to record thousands of votes; a North Carolina
county that lost more than 4,500 votes due to a mistaken belief by officials
that a computer that stored ballots could hold more data than it did;
a substantial drop off in Democratic votes in proportion to voter registration
in counties utilizing optical scan machines that was apparently not
present in counties using other mechanisms; and numerous reports from
Youngstown, Ohio, as well as Palm Beach, Broward and Dade counties in
Florida, that voters who attempted to cast a vote for John Kerry on
electronic voting machines saw their votes instead recorded as votes
for Bush.
Freedom of Information
Act Requests
Blackboxvoting.org,
a nonpartisan, nonprofit consumer protection group for elections, has
filed the largest Freedom of Information Act request in history. It
seeks the internal computer logs (which are public records ) from voting
machines from every county that used electronic voting machines. The
organization has initiated fraud investigations in selected counties.
It needs lawyers to enforce public records laws, as well as computer
security professionals and citizen volunteers.
Open Records
Act Motions
Cindy Cohn,
Legal Director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation in San Francisco,
told me that independent testing of voting machines could shed light
on why so many people who tried to vote for Kerry saw their votes registered
for Bush. Her organization is moving under the Open Records Act, which
allows people to see government records, to gather information, including
the impoundment of voting machines, in some counties in Florida, Ohio,
New Mexico and Pennsylvania that had serious problems with the machines.
Local counsel are needed to help with this effort. Cohn can be contacted
at cindy@eff.org.
Results Not
Final Until January
Although John
Kerry conceded that George W. Bush won the election, a candidate's concession
is not legally binding. Electors will be certified on December 7, which
gives a presumption of legitimacy to the vote; but electors actually
vote on December 13. These votes are not opened by Congress until January
6, so there is still time to challenge the results in key states such
as Ohio and Florida. A challenge requires a written objection from one
House member and one senator. If that objection is recorded, both Houses
separate again and they vote by majority vote as to whether to accept
the slate of electoral votes from that state.
Bush is claiming
he has a mandate, planning to spend his "political capital."
Curiously, virtually all of the so-called "anomalies" in the
voting results favor Bush. The electors have not yet voted; the election
results are not yet final. In the words of Yogi Berra, "It's not
over until it's over."
Marjorie Cohn,
a contributing editor to t r u t h o u t, is a professor at Thomas Jefferson
School of Law, executive vice president of the National Lawyers Guild,
and the U.S. representative to the executive committee of the American
Association of Jurists.
http://www.truthout.org/docs_04/112204A.shtml |