The
E-Vote Factor: Kerry Conceded But Did He Really Lose?
Monday, November 8th, 2004
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Serious questions are being raised about the use of electronic voting
machines in the 2004 presidential election. In an Ohio county, Bush
mistakenly received some 3,900 extra votes. We speak Johns Hopkins University
professor Aviel Rubin and investigative reporter Bev Harris. [includes
rush transcript]
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President Bush arrives back in Washington today after spending a 3-day
weekend at Camp David. Since John Kerry conceded to Bush last Wednesday,
the president and his advisers have talked extensively about what they
call Bush's strong mandate to govern following the November 2 election.
But as the rumor mill swirls about a reshuffling of Bush's cabinet and
John Kerry returns to the Senate, there are many people who are not
willing to simply move on from last Tuesday's election.
Many of John Kerry's supporters were stunned last Wednesday when their
candidate conceded the presidency to Bush. Just hours earlier, his running
mate John Edwards told a rally of their supporters in Boston that they
would not stop until every vote was counted, a reference to the hundreds
of thousands of provisional ballots in the key state of Ohio that some
Democrats believed could have tipped the balance. But it's not just
the provisional ballots.
Even though Kerry
has stopped fighting for the presidency, serious questions abound about
the use of electronic voting machines. Take this story: In a voting
precinct in Ohio's Franklin County, records show that 638 people cast
ballots. Yet, George W Bush got 4,258 votes to John Kerry's 260. In
reality, Bush only received 365 votes. That means Bush got nearly 3,900
extra votes. And that's just in one small precinct. This in a state
that Bush officially won by only 136,000 votes. Elections officials
blamed electronic voting for the extra Bush votes.
Meanwhile, a
number of Congresspeople are asking the General Accounting Office to
investigate electronic voting and the 2004 election and the nonprofit
group Blackbox Voting has begun the process of filing the largest Freedom
of Information Act request in history.
Bev Harris, investigative
reporter and author of the book "Black Box Voting." She has
announced plans to file the largest FOIA action in history by seeking
the internal logs from voting machines from every county that used electronic
voting machines.
Aviel Rubin, professor at Johns Hopkins University and co-author of
the report "Analysis of an Electronic Voting System" the initial
study of security flaws in voting machine software. He served as an
election judge in Baltimore County on November 2nd.
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RUSH TRANSCRIPT
AMY GOODMAN:
We turn now to the woman behind that process, investigative reporter,
Bev Harris. She is the author of the book, Black Box Voting. We also
are joined by Professor Aviel Rubin who teaches at Johns Hopkins University
and is co-author of the report, “Analysis of an Electronic Voting
System,” the initial study of security flaws in voting machine
software. He served as an election judge in Baltimore county on November
2. Bev Harris, let's begin with you. What exactly -- what kind of information
are you looking for now?
BEV HARRIS: Well,
first, we’re seeking internal audit logs of the machines, which
are public record. There's nothing proprietary about this. It's interesting
so far. We have been getting responses, but the officials who run the
machines, the county officials, are really so clueless. They don't know
what their machines' records are, or how to print them out. So we find
ourselves guiding them through the menus on their own software to show
them how to print this information out which is a bit scary. But we
also sought documentation on all of the troubled slips in all of the
documentation of any problems that they had. Right now, we're following
up, you know, we have all of the anomalies such as the viewer mentioning,
and we're following up with specific public records requests, for example,
give me the internal log of machine number such and such of that precinct,
or depending on the type of anomaly they're reporting, we are seeking
the specific types of records that will shed more light on that.
AMY GOODMAN:
We're going to go to a break and then come back to this discussion of
the counting of the votes last Tuesday. This is Democracy Now!. We'll
be back in a minute.
[break]
AMY GOODMAN:
This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report.
I'm Amy Goodman, as we continue on the issue of the electronic voting
machines and the overall count in the election. Our guest are Bev Harris,
author of the book, Black Box Voting, has plans to file the largest
Freedom of Information Act Request in history, by seeking the internal
logs from voting machines of every county that used electronic voting
machines, and Aviel Rubin, professor at Johns Hopkins University, who
served as an elections judge in Baltimore county on November 2 and is
co-author of the report, “Analysis of the Electronic Voting System.”
Professor Rubin, your assessment of what happened Tuesday.
AVIEL RUBIN:
Well, I think that we have a problem now, which is that we have dug
ourselves a big hole by running an election using systems that -- there's
really no way to tell what's going on inside the voting machines. So,
when -- I'd like to separate out all of the talk about the glitches
and things not working from the idea that somebody, you know, security
-- somebody may have rigged the machines or tampered with them. And
I think the fact that we're using systems where it's impossible to tell
is very scary. So, Bev talked about these problems that they're trying
to uncover, and we have seen the news stories about problems, but what
I worry about are the ones that may have happened that are totally undetectable.
For example, it doesn't make bug news if a voting machine switches 5%
of the votes from one candidate to another, because nobody ever knows
it because we have a secret ballot in this country. I think it's very
important that we move away from systems where nobody can really see
what's going on inside at the time of the election. And there's no capability
of doing a recount towards more verifiable, auditable systems, for example,
if you had a voter verified paper ballot.
AMY GOODMAN:
Why the opposition? You had the Election Monitoring Group, that the
State Department brought in itself from the OSCE, the Organization of
Security and Cooperation Europe. Some of their election monitors were
saying that this is worse than the situation in Serbia, another one
referring to the Venezuelan elections and saying, their electronic voting
machines, people were given a ticket that they dropped in a box and
randomly around the country, they can compare the paper trail in the
boxes to the voting machines. Why is there such fierce opposition to
having any paper trail, which means zero possibility of recount?
AVIEL RUBIN:
I have always been very surprised that the people running elections
are not jumping at the chance of having a way to recount the election.
I think that, you know, the best thing would be to get one of those
people on the show and ask them that question, because it doesn't make
any sense it me. From the vendor's perspective, they would sell a more
expensive, more feature-rich product if they could add photograph verifiable
printout. I have been completely confused about why they're -- everybody
is not embracing this concept.
AMY GOODMAN:
Are you convinced, Professor Rubin, that President Bush won this election?
AVIEL RUBIN:
I don't know. I think that as long as we use systems where you cannot
really tell what's going on inside the machine -- you know, when I was
an election judge, I watched people walk into the precinct, walk up
to Diebold machines, vote, and walk out. And at the end of the day we
printed results. And I was thinking if I had written that program that's
running on those machines, I could have made any outcome that I wanted
come out. So, you know, do I believe that Bush really won? Well, I don't
know.
AMY GOODMAN:
What about this letter, Bev Harris, that has been signed by three Congress
members, including Florida Congress member Robert Wexler, John Conyers,
and Gerald Nadler. Can you talk about it? We have hardly seen any reference
to it.
BEV HARRIS: Well,
you know, the concern I have is, we have got to go after this from all
fronts. I haven't seen any reference to it in the media. I have also
been told from sources that I have inside the media that are fairly
high up that particularly in TV, there's been -- there is now a lockdown
on this story. It is officially and from an executive producer level,
let's move on time. And I am very concerned about that, because it looks
like we're going to have to go to places like BBC, to get the real story
out. I find it amazing that we went ahead with an election without even
auditing it. You are never going to find the problems with the machines
that you can quantify until you at least do the basic canvassing that's
in the current election procedures, such as, comparing how many people
showed up to vote with how many signatures are in this poll book with
how many votes show up in the machines. They haven't even done that.
And to make it even worse, Ohio, they don't even know how many provisional
ballots there are. They don't know if there's 150,000 or 500,000. They
don't seem to be able to tell us what records they have. This is amazing,
and I knew this was going to happen. They set up this thing. They said
we're going to have provisional ballots nationwide. They didn't set
up any auditing for them. And so, in case after case, we're not able
to account for those ballots. We ought to know, because they're cast
at the precinct. We ought to know how many provision ballots we have
on election night. Why wouldn't we if we have proper book keeping?
AMY GOODMAN:
There's been serious questions raised about New Mexico, but does it
hurt trying to find out the ultimate counts that John Kerry and John
Edwards so immediately conceded, despite the fact that Edwards had said
as they promised during the campaigns, making references to Al Gore
squelching protests four years ago, that they would make sure that the
votes were counted?
BEV HARRIS: Oh
yes, they conceded very prematurely. As I was saying in Ohio, they don't
even know if they won or lost in Ohio, really. They are basing this
on, I think, a verbal okay from someone in the Secretary of State's
office that said, that they were being assured there was only 150,000
provisional ballots. Well I said, where is the source data on that?
What auditing do they have on those? They couldn't tell me. You see,
I don't understand how you would concede anyway without even beginning
the canvassing, because with these voting machines, we don't have adequate
auditing in place, but we have some. The full auditing we have does
-- it does find some anomalies that are quite big and sometimes they
flip elections. So, you know, why not just wait a couple of days. The
other thing I'm seeing is that in some parts the media gave a huge push
to hurry, hurry, hurry, certify. This was happening in New Mexico. They're
saying -- they're putting tremendous pressure on Governor Bill Richardson
to hurry and certify the election. Well why? You have x-number of days
to certify the election. One would think you would want it to be right,
and you’d think would you want to go through and you want to check
out the information. And understand, a lot of this is already election
procedures. We keep saying that election procedures are what really
save us from the insecure and mysterious machines, and that the election
procedures would catch anomalies. Understand, that they have not done
the election procedures yet in most cases. They have chosen to go ahead
and call elections without doing the very procedures that they say protect
the system.
AMY GOODMAN:
Well, I want to thank you both for being with us, Bev Harris, who is
filing the largest Freedom of Information Act request in the history
of the act, and Professor Avi Rubin of Johns Hopkins University.
AVIEL RUBIN:
Thanks a lot.
AMY GOODMAN:
Thank you.
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