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DIEBOLD SELLING E-VOTING? Election Reform, Fraud, & News Sunday 03/18/07

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freedomfries Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-18-07 06:58 AM
Original message
DIEBOLD SELLING E-VOTING? Election Reform, Fraud, & News Sunday 03/18/07
DIEBOLD SELLING E-VOTING? Election Reform, Fraud, & News Sunday 03/18/07

Diebold "buy"

Wedbush Morgan Securities
newsratings.com
March 16, 2008
http://www.newratings.com/analyst_news/article_1494741.html

NEW YORK, March 16 (newratings.com) - Analyst Gil B Luria at Wedbush Morgan reiterates his "buy" rating on Diebold Inc (DBD.NYS). The 12-month target price is set to $52.In a research note published yesterday, the analysts mention that the company is on schedule to divest its Cassis plant. The transfer of production from France to Hungary is likely to generate annual cost savings of $6-$7 million, the analyst says. While Diebold is inclined to sell the US part of the election business, a spin-off is also possible, Wedbush Morgan adds.
http://www.newratings.com/analyst_news/article_1494741.html

:argh:

All members welcome and encouraged to participate.
Please post Election Reform, Fraud, & Related News on this thread.
If you can:
1. Post stories and announcements you find on the web.
2. Post stories using the "Election Fraud and Reform News Sources" listed here:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=203x371233
3. Re-post stories and announcements you find on DU, providing a link to the original thread with thanks to the Original Poster, too.
4. Start a discussion thread by re-posting a story you see on this thread.
Please "Recommend" for the Greatest Page.
:patriot:
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freedomfries Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-18-07 07:12 AM
Response to Original message
1. OH: Diebold looking to shed its criticized elections equipment division
Diebold may exit race
Green company might be looking to shed its criticized elections equipment division


M.R. Kropko AP
Akron Beacon Journal, OH
March 6, 2008
Re-Post
http://www.ohio.com/mld/beaconjournal/business/16842805.htm

Diebold Inc. saw great potential in the modernization of elections equipment. Now, analysts say, executives may be angling for ways to dump its e-voting subsidiary that's widely seen as tarnishing the company's reputation.

Though Diebold Election Systems -- the company's smallest business segment -- has shown growth and profit, it's faced persistent criticism over the reliability and security of its touch-screen voting machines. About 150,000 of its touch-screen or optical-scan systems were used in 34 states in last November's election.

The criticism is particularly jarring for a nearly 150-year-old company whose primary focus has long been safes and automated teller machines.

``This is a company that has built relationships with banks every day of every year. It pains them greatly to see their brand tarnished by a marginal operating unit,'' said Gil Luria, an investment analyst who monitors Green-based Diebold for Wedbush Morgan Securities Inc.

In the calm after the November midterm elections, Tom Swidarski, Diebold's chief executive officer, told analysts in a conference call that the company plans to announce its long-term strategy for the elections unit early this year.

...
Diebold indicated it still is ``vulnerable to these types of challenges because the electronic elections systems industry is emerging.'' The report also mentioned inconsistency in the way state and local governments are adapting to federal requirements for upgrades in voting technology.

More changes in the voting laws could further hurt business, the filing said.

Diebold spokesman Mike Jacobsen said that whenever Diebold evaluates one of its businesses, it looks for growth, profitability and characteristics that make it a long-term strategic fit.

Jacobsen would not say when the announcement about the subsidiary's future may come.

``I imagine at this point it's a question of whether have they found a private equity buyer yet or are they about to announce they are going to look for one,'' Luria said. He did not speculate on who that might be.

Diebold headaches have abounded.

Some of its voting machines have been criticized for lacking a voter-verified paper trail for post-election audits. Last summer, the Open Voting Foundation issued a report alleging that Diebold touch-screen functions can be changed with the flip of an internal switch. Activists have found source code online. And there have also been numerous lawsuits and leaked internal memos.

FTN Midwest Securities analyst Kartik Mehta wonders if a business that has been a lightning rod for criticism is worth it. He said Diebold leaders need to decide ``if that negative publicity is hurting them in selling products to financial institutions, security products to government or any of their other customers.''


Diebold jumped into e-voting in 2002, when it acquired Global Election Systems. It had some prior experiences with electronic voting through its Procomp business in Brazil.

The elections business was good for 8 percent of Diebold revenue and about 12 percent of profit last year, but some of that was from Diebold's voting and lottery contracts in Brazil.

By comparison, the ATM segment produced about 65 percent of the company's revenue and 63 percent of profit in 2006. Safes have evolved into Diebold's second-biggest segment, now called ``security solutions.'' It makes various devices and systems for business and government security. Last year it gave Diebold about 27 percent of its revenue and 25 percent of its profit.

...
Diebold has always defended its voting machines and its own intentions, even after its former chairman and chief executive, Wally O'Dell, sought with little success to convince critics his strong ties with Republican politics as a fundraiser for George W. Bush were not the motive for the company's involvement in elections.

O'Dell resigned in 2005 and was replaced by Swidarski, who had been the company's president and chief operating officer. His main focus has been on expanding international business for ATMs, a less public business.

Voting machine makers such as Diebold; Election Systems & Software, of Omaha, Neb.; Sequoia Voting Systems, of Oakland, Calif.; and Hart InterCivic, of Austin, Texas, have had the federal Help America Vote Act of 2002 as a sales catalyst. That act had $3.9 billion of funding.

Kimball Brace, who closely tracks voting system vendors as president of Washington-based Election Data Services Inc., said there is uncertainty now, a result of possible legislation setting new requirements with no promise of additional funding.
http://www.ohio.com/mld/beaconjournal/business/16842805.htm
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freedomfries Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-18-07 07:20 AM
Response to Reply #1
3. OH: Electronic voting systems a small part of Diebold, but much scrutinized
Electronic voting systems a small part of Diebold, but much scrutinized

G. Patrick Kelley
The Canton Repository, OH
March 6, 2007
http://www.cantonrep.com/index.php?ID=340132&Category=5&subCategoryID=

GREEN Diebold is the largest company making electronic voting equipment in the U.S.

But the company that has been bedrock in the financial and security equipment and service business also has been the lightning rod for critics of electronic voting.

The business has had its ups and downs for Diebold, and has never amounted to more than about 5 percent of the company's $3 billion in revenue.

But analysts say the voting business has hurt the company's stock price at times, and the company hasn't hidden the fact that things might change.

"Early this year, we will communicate our long-term strategy related to the elections business," President and CEO Thomas Swidarski told analysts in a Jan. 31 conference call after announcing fourth-quarter and annual earnings.

In an annual report to the Securities and Exchange Commission last week, the company said some jurisdictions have been slow to accept electronic voting, and "Future legislative changes or other changes in the law could have adverse effects in our business, financial condition and results of operations."

But that time apparently hasn't come. Swidarski and the company are making no statements on the future of the election business.

And it's a business that has been tough on the company. Diebold, which was used to getting most of its press in trade magazines, was unused to getting calls from large and small newspapers across the country, where officials were considering the purchase of Diebold voting equipment.

"Because of the political nature of our elections systems business, various individuals and advocacy groups may raise challenges in the media and elsewhere," the company told the SEC.

The opposition "... may adversely affect the company's relations with its elections customers," the report said.

It has certainly affected the company's communications department. Although election questions are directed to Diebold Elections' McKinney, Texas headquarters, there are still many directed to global headquarters here.

http://www.cantonrep.com/index.php?ID=340132&Category=5&subCategoryID=
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freedomfries Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-18-07 07:51 AM
Response to Reply #3
7. OH: "No-confidence vote," says Cincinnati Post
No-confidence vote
Diebold deciding on strategy for its election unit


M.R. Kropko, AP
Cincinnati Post
Match 6, 2007
http://news.cincypost.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070306/BIZ/703060322/1001


Randy Fox, right, explains how to work the printer housing on a Diebold Electronic Voting Systems unit during a training session in Cleveland in this Oct. 11, 2006 file photo. Just five years after Diebold boldly plunged into the changing United States e-voting market, some close observers think it may soon try to find a way out.


CLEVELAND - Diebold Inc. saw great potential in the modernization of elections equipment. Now, analysts say, executives may be angling for ways to dump its e-voting subsidiary that's widely seen as tarnishing the company's reputation.

Though Diebold Election Systems - the company's smallest business segment - has shown growth and profit, it's faced persistent criticism over the reliability and security of its touch-screen voting machines. About 150,000 of its touch-screen or optical scan systems were used in 34 states in last November's election.

The criticism is particularly jarring for a nearly 150-year-old company whose primary focus has long been safes and automated teller machines.

"This is a company that has built relationships with banks every day of every year. It pains them greatly to see their brand tarnished by a marginal operating unit," said Gil Luria, an investment analyst who monitors Diebold for Wedbush Morgan Securities Inc.
http://news.cincypost.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070306/BIZ/703060322/1001
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orpupilofnature57 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-18-07 07:16 AM
Response to Original message
2. Much more important than the Rosetta stone , a sign of what we're saying now,
Election apparatus should be held in higher regard than our Currency , outsourced vital pieces of u.s.
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freedomfries Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-18-07 07:29 AM
Response to Original message
4. Nat: OpEdNews: Action alert! Amend HR811
ACTION ALERT! Amend HR811--contact your members of Congress ASAP

Teresa Hommel
OpEdNews.com
March 16, 2007
http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_teresa_h_070316_action_alert_21_amend_.htm


Hi Everyone,
We just had a huge success in the NY City Council!! But now we are facing a
federal threat --HR811, the new federal "Voter Confidence and Increased
Accessibility Act of 2007," has some very dangerous flaws.
If these flaws can't be removed via amendment, I believe it is better for our Congressional Representatives to withdraw their sponsorship and vote against the bill.

Worst Problem: In response to growing national demand for paper ballots, HR811 defines a "voter-verified paper trail" from an electronic voting machine
as a paper ballot! But nobody counts the votes on the paper trail to get election results. No law requires the paper trail to be counted completely (for example, New York law requires only 3% spot-check). HR811 would cause endless problems and confusion with state election laws where the term "ballot" means a voter-marked paper ballot. The "thing" that would be defined as a ballot in federal law would not have to be counted, according to most state laws, to
determine election results.

Second Worst: HR811 supposedly requires audits, but states with certain state audit requirements are exempt. A state's audit could consist of merely a reprint of the tally sheets from electronic voting machines. This is a serious loophole. It means HR811 allows 100% electronic elections in which neither the paper trail nor any paper ballots need to be counted.

HR811 could pass the House of Representatives by the end of March!
All Congressional Representatives from NYC need to be contacted with the demand to amend HR811 or kill it.

This is a strong request, but after seeing the New York City Council stand
up yesterday and say NO INVISIBLE ELECTRONIC BALLOTS, I think we need to ask
our Congressional Representatives to show the same courage and dedication to
democracy. Everyone knows that government behind locked doors is either
corrupt or vulnerable to corruption. Putting our votes inside a computer, where
no
one can observe, is just as bad. Some people argue that the USA has already
spent $3.5 billion for new electronic voting machines, and no one wants to say
it was a mistake. I'll say it. Will you?

Below are actions you can take NOW.
Make your own letter by copying
_www.wheresthepaper.org/HR811CongressLetter.htm_
(http://www.wheresthepaper.org/HR811CongressLetter.htm)
Fill in your name, address, and the date

To fax: print the letter, sign your name, and fax it to the Representatives
listed below
To email: copy the letter to each representative who accepts email (see list
below)
MORE INFO:
_http://www.wheresthepaper.org/ny.html#HR811_
http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_teresa_h_070316_action_alert_21_amend_.htm
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freedomfries Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-18-07 07:36 AM
Response to Original message
5. Nat: LA Times: Blogs can top the presses
Blogs can top the presses
Talking Points Memo drove the U.S. attorrneys story, proof that Web writers with input from devoted readers can reshape journalism.


Terry McDermott
Los Angeles Times
March 17, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-blogs17mar17,0,2952916.story?track=mostviewed-homepage

New York — IN a third-floor Flower District walkup with bare wooden floors, plain white walls and an excitable toy poodle named Simon, six guys dressed mainly in T-shirts and jeans sit all day in front of computer screens at desks arranged around the oblong room's perimeter, pecking away at their keyboards and, bit by bit, at the media establishment.

The world headquarters of TPM Media is pretty much like any small newsroom, anywhere, except for the shirts. And the dog. And the quiet. Most newsrooms are notably noisy places, full of shrill phones and quacking reporters. Here there is mainly quiet, except for the clacking keyboards.

It's 20 or so blocks up town to the heart of the media establishment, the Midtown towers that house the big newspaper, magazine and book publishers. And yet it was here in a neighborhood of bodegas and floral wholesalers that, over the last two months, one of the biggest news stories in the country — the Bush administration's firing of a group of U.S. attorneys — was pieced together by the reporters of the blog Talking Points Memo.

The bloggers used the usual tools of good journalists everywhere — determination, insight, ingenuity — plus a powerful new force that was not available to reporters until blogging came along: the ability to communicate almost instantaneously with readers via the Internet and to deputize those readers as editorial researchers, in effect multiplying the reporting power by an order of magnitude.

In December, Josh Marshall, who owns and runs TPM , posted a short item linking to a news report in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette about the firing of the U.S. attorney for that state. Marshall later followed up, adding that several U.S. attorneys were apparently being replaced and asked his 100,000 or so daily readers to write in if they knew anything about U.S. attorneys being fired in their areas.

For the two months that followed, Talking Points Memo and one of its sister sites, TPM Muckraker, accumulated evidence from around the country on who the axed prosecutors were, and why politics might be behind the firings. The cause was taken up among Democrats in Congress. One senior Justice Department official has resigned, and Atty. Gen. Alberto R. Gonzales is now in the media crosshairs.

This isn't the first time Marshall and Talking Points have led coverage on national issues. In 2002, the site was the first to devote more than just passing mention to then-Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott's claim that the country would have been better off had the segregationist 1948 presidential campaign of Sen. Strom Thurmond succeeded. The subsequent furor cost Lott his leadership position.
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-blogs17mar17,0,2952916.story?track=mostviewed-homepage
:toast:
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freedomfries Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-18-07 07:42 AM
Response to Original message
6. FL: Sarasota voting machines tested
Sarasota voting machines tested

Bradenton Herald, FL
March 16, 2007
http://www.bradenton.com/mld/bradenton/16919283.htm

SARASOTA - The controversial touch-screen voting machines in Sarasota County are scheduled to be tested next week prior to the April 10 runoff election.

Sarasota County Supervisor of Elections Kathy Dent is inviting the public to observe the logic and accuracy testing of the county's voting and tabulating equipment to be used in the runoff election of Sarasota's District 2 race between incumbent Commissioner Mary Anne Servian and her challenger Richard "Dick" Clapp.

According to a county press release, logic and accuracy testing is performed on a random sampling of all the voting machines that will be used on election day.
:dunce:
Florida law requires the supervisor of elections to test the county's voting and tabulation machines prior to each election to ensure that they are operating and recording accurately, according to the release.

Testing of the machines is scheduled for 9 a.m.Thursday, March 22 at the office of the Supervisor of Elections in the Terrace Building at 2001 Adams Lane in Sarasota.
http://www.bradenton.com/mld/bradenton/16919283.htm
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freedomfries Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-18-07 07:59 AM
Response to Original message
8. Nat: McClatchy: A look at what's behind the U.S. attorney flap
A look at what's behind the U.S. attorney flap

Ron Hutcheson
The Tribune, San Luis Obispo
McClatchy Newspapers
March 16, 2006
Re-Post
http://www.sanluisobispo.com/mld/sanluisobispo/news/politics/16919376.htm

WASHINGTON - Suspicions about political influence in the firings of eight U.S. attorneys last year focus on a handful of cases. Here's a look at the dismissals that are drawing the most attention:

_Former U.S. Attorney H.E. "Bud" Cummins lost his job in Arkansas to make room for Tim Griffin, a Republican political operative and a protege of presidential aide Karl Rove, President Bush's chief political adviser. E-mails indicate that Rove and then-White House counsel Harriet Miers pushed the Justice Department to give Griffin the Arkansas job.

Cummins resigned without protest, and administration officials haven't explained why they were so intent on putting Griffin in the job.

_Former U.S. Attorney David Iglesias, who was fired in New Mexico, has been outspoken in his belief that politics played a role in his ouster.

Republican officials in his state complained to the White House and to the Justice Department that he wasn't aggressive enough in pursuing voter-fraud allegations against Democrats. Republicans were also upset that Iglesias resisted pressure to indict Democratic officials on corruption charges before the November election.

Iglesias said he felt "leaned on" when two prominent New Mexico Republicans, Sen. Pete Domenici and Rep. Heather Wilson, separately called him about the investigation. At the time, Wilson was in danger of losing her congressional seat, and Republicans were struggling to avoid a Democratic takeover in Congress.

A 2005 Justice Department evaluation concluded that Iglesias should keep his job. He didn't appear on a list of targeted prosecutors that circulated in October 2006. But his status seemed to have changed quickly. By Nov. 15, about a week after Republicans lost control of Congress, Justice Department officials had decided that Iglesias should go.

_Former U.S. Attorney Carol Lam was fired from her job in southern California after overseeing the investigation that led to the corruption conviction of then-Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham, R-Calif.

In an e-mail dated May 11, 2006, Justice Department official Kyle Sampson urged the White House counsel's office to call him regarding "the real problem we have right now with Carol Lam."

Earlier that morning, The Los Angeles Times reported that the Cunningham investigation had expanded to include another California Republican, congressman Jerry Lewis.
http://www.sanluisobispo.com/mld/sanluisobispo/news/politics/16919376.htm

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freedomfries Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-18-07 08:05 AM
Response to Original message
9. FL: Sarasota elections supervisor Dent may face congressional inquiry
Elections supervisor may face congressional inquiry

Fox 13, Tampa Bay, FL
16 Mar 2007, 6:47 PM EDT
http://www.myfoxtampabay.com/myfox/pages/News/Detail?contentId=2695671&version=1&locale=EN-US&layoutCode=TSTY&pageId=3.2.1

SARASOTA - Four months later, the controversy over Vern Buchanan's razor thin congressional win in the 13th District is not going away.

We're only learning now that elections supervisor Kathy Dent received a warning memo before the election from the voting machine makers about potentially sticky buttons, but didn't tell anyone outside her office.

"We discussed it with the staff," said elections supervisor Kathy Dent.


Dent felt the best solution was to display posters telling voters about being careful about their selections and checking the review screens.

"It's not really a major problem because the review screen will always tell you if you didn't hold it down long enough," Dent said.

But Dent's decision not to go public with the warning memo has caused a ripple effect all the way up to Capitol Hill.

The head of a congressional committee—Juanita Millender McDonald—says Dent's office "had an opportunity to let voters know that something was going on and they didn't."

The congressperson plans to call dent to Capitol Hill to testify—something Dent learned from us.

"I hope they notify me so I have time to make all my plans," Dent said.

http://www.myfoxtampabay.com/myfox/pages/News/Detail?contentId=2695671&version=1&locale=EN-US&layoutCode=TSTY&pageId=3.2.1
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freedomfries Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-18-07 08:30 AM
Response to Reply #9
12. Fl: PFAW: Stunning News on the Fiasco Surrounding the November Election in Florida’s 13th Congressio
Stunning News on the Fiasco Surrounding the November Election in Florida’s 13th Congressional District

March 15, 2007
To: Members of the Boards & Progressive Allies
Fr: Ralph G. Neas, President, People For the American Way Foundation
http://www.pfaw.org/pfaw/general/default.aspx?oid=23728

Over the past two days, new information has emerged in the fiasco surrounding the November election in Florida’s 13th Congressional District, in which 18,000 votes disappeared from iVotronic voting machines. Nearly three months before the election, Sarasota Supervisor of Elections Kathy Dent was informed by the manufacturer that a glitch in the machines could interfere with recording the votes – and she took no action.
...
A lawsuit challenging the results of the race is ongoing, brought by bipartisan voters represented by People For the American Way Foundation, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Voter Action, and the ACLU of Florida. Through discovery in that lawsuit and through public records requests, the voters have requested all documents related to the use of ES&S’s machines in Sarasota, and yet, this letter was not disclosed. Indeed, in seeking to avoid an independent examination of the machines by all parties in the case, ES&S and Ms Dent, have represented to the Court that there were no firmware glitches, and that the paperless iVotronic machines performed perfectly.

Now we see that in fact, ES&S and Dent knew about these flaws months before the election. Ms. Dent and ES&S claim they didn’t have time to certify the firmware patch to fix this problem before the election – the September primary election – but there have been two elections since in Sarasota County, including the November, 2006 general election. Indeed, rather than use the flawed ES&S equipment, Pasco County, Florida chose not to use the affected machines in the November election. Ms. Dent claims that she disclosed e-mails which referenced the letter in passing, but while alleging that she gave the Jennings campaign “all the information that had, she does not deny withholding this letter, not only from Jennings campaign, but from the court, the litigants, and perhaps most importantly, from the voters who entrusted her. The auditors hired by the State of Florida to privately audit the firmware used in Sarasota make only passing reference to the glitch in their audit report, trying to pass it off as simply an “allegation that has been floated on Internet newsgroups.” But now the chief auditor admits that the audit team knew this was not merely an internet rumor, since they had the ES&S letter when they conducted the audit, as well has having logs of the numerous poll workers who complained about delay in the vote being recorded. Their dismissive rejection of this bug somehow contributing to the undervote is similarly unconvincing, and is undermined by their failure to be forthcoming about the true nature of the firmware defect.

...
This shocking disclosure only serves to highlight the need for the voters of Sarasota County to have a revote in this race, and for Congress to conduct its own independent investigation on what exactly happened in Sarasota, and who the voters of Sarasota actually preferred represent them in Congress. It is now clear that even ES&S knew that voting conducted on these defective paperless machines could not be trusted and that it was “required” that the firmware be fixed. Kathy Dent and the state could have acted diligently to repair this flaw. They not only failed to do so, but failed to disclose the existence of this flaw to the voters she serves. ES&S could have told the Court that this glitch, or “condition” as they call it, existed when it claimed there was no basis for an independent examination of its firmware, but it hid that fact instead. It’s time for transparency in Sarasota elections, and time we learned the true intent of the voters in the 13th Congressional District.
http://www.pfaw.org/pfaw/general/default.aspx?oid=23728


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freedomfries Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-18-07 08:15 AM
Response to Original message
10. Nat: WashPo: Voter-fraud folklore lives on
Voter-fraud folklore lives on

Marie Cocco, Washington Post
Indianapolis Star
March 16,2007
http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070316/OPINION/703160417/-1/ZONES04

The fiasco over the fired U.S. attorneys started out as a footnote.

"The president recalls hearing complaints about election fraud not being vigorously prosecuted" and "may have" mentioned this to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, White House spokeswoman Dana Perino admitted.

The operative phrase is "election fraud," though in Republican parlance it is usually called "voter fraud." Republicans claim, loudly and regularly, that an army of ineligible voters -- illegal immigrants, convicted felons, dead people -- has been invading American polling places, diminishing the value of honest voters' sacred ballots. It is, of course, leveled solely against Democrats and their supporters.
The charges are almost invariably debunked -- by courts, by prosecutors, by state elections officials and by local newspapers that probe beyond partisan screeching and get down to the facts.


"There is widespread but not unanimous agreement that there is little polling place fraud, or at least much less than is claimed, including voter impersonation, 'dead' voters, noncitizen voting and felon voters," says a May 2006 report to the U.S. Election Assistance Commission. The bipartisan commission didn't widely release the consultants' review, but makes it available on request.
Besides rejecting the notion that hordes of ineligible voters are stealing elections, the consultants' study refutes another common Republican claim -- that false registration forms are leading to rampant fraud. The study even cites Craig Donsanto, chief of the Justice Department's election crimes branch, as saying "the number of election fraud related complaints has not gone up since 2002."

The Justice Department's own statistics show that of 87 ballot-fraud convictions obtained since the department launched its "voter integrity" initiative in 2002, 17 were for noncitizen voting and another six were for multiple voting. Most of the cases involved vote-buying schemes hatched by local politicians.
So, with 122 million votes cast in the 2004 elections, and about 83 million cast last November, what are the statistical chances that some votes are fraudulent? You do the math.
:patriot:
And what about all the sensational claims? They are sensational claims.
Take the 2004 Washington state gubernatorial election, which appears to figure in the dismissal of former U.S. Attorney John McKay. When the skintight race flipped to Democrat Christine Gregoire after a recount, Republicans cried foul. But after six months of legal investigation and a two-week trial, a county court judge rejected every Republican claim. Though he said there were improper votes cast, the judge also declared he'd found no evidence of fraud. The Republicans didn't appeal.
...
But the vote-fraud folklore serves its purpose. It enables Republicans to push through state requirements for photos and other forms of voter identification, rules that depress turnout and impact elderly and minority voters -- that is, Democrats -- most seriously. This is the real fraud.
:patriot:
http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070316/OPINION/703160417/-1/ZONES04
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freedomfries Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-18-07 08:23 AM
Response to Original message
11. Nat: NYTimes Editorial Re-Post: Phony Fraud Charges
Phony Fraud Charges

Editorial
The New York Tomes
Re-Post
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/16/opinion/16fri1.html?_r=2&pagewanted=print&oref=slogin&oref=slogin

In its fumbling attempts to explain the purge of United States attorneys, the Bush administration has argued that the fired prosecutors were not aggressive enough about addressing voter fraud. It is a phony argument; there is no evidence that any of them ignored real instances of voter fraud. But more than that, it is a window on what may be a major reason for some of the firings.

In partisan Republican circles, the pursuit of voter fraud is code for suppressing the votes of minorities and poor people. By resisting pressure to crack down on “fraud,” the fired United States attorneys actually appear to have been standing up for the integrity of the election system.

John McKay, one of the fired attorneys, says he was pressured by Republicans to bring voter fraud charges after the 2004 Washington governor’s race, which a Democrat, Christine Gregoire, won after two recounts. Republicans were trying to overturn an election result they did not like, but Mr. McKay refused to go along. “There was no evidence,” he said, “and I am not going to drag innocent people in front of a grand jury.”

:patriot:

Later, when he interviewed with Harriet Miers, then the White House counsel, for a federal judgeship that he ultimately did not get, he says, he was asked to explain “criticism that I mishandled the 2004 governor’s election.”

Mr. McKay is not the only one of the federal attorneys who may have been brought down for refusing to pursue dubious voter fraud cases. Before David Iglesias of New Mexico was fired, prominent New Mexico Republicans reportedly complained repeatedly to Karl Rove about Mr. Iglesias’s failure to indict Democrats for voter fraud. The White House said that last October, just weeks before Mr. McKay and most of the others were fired, President Bush complained that United States attorneys were not pursuing voter fraud aggressively enough.

There is no evidence of rampant voter fraud in this country. Rather, Republicans under Mr. Bush have used such allegations as an excuse to suppress the votes of Democratic-leaning groups. They have intimidated Native American voter registration campaigners in South Dakota with baseless charges of fraud. They have pushed through harsh voter ID bills in states like Georgia and Missouri, both blocked by the courts, that were designed to make it hard for people who lack drivers’ licenses — who are disproportionately poor, elderly or members of minorities — to vote. Florida passed a law placing such onerous conditions on voter registration drives, which register many members of minorities and poor people, that the League of Women Voters of Florida suspended its registration work in the state.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/16/opinion/16fri1.html?_r=2&pagewanted=print&oref=slogin&oref=slogin
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freedomfries Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-18-07 08:34 AM
Response to Original message
13. Spring time helps make hope live!
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livvy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-18-07 10:10 AM
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14. Fraudulent Firings: OpEd: Paul Rogat Loeb
This is from an email. Permission to repost:
"On a different subject, here’s a new piece of mine from the Baltimore Sun, on the audacity of the administration trying to justify the US Attorney firings in terms of combating election fraud. Please pass it on to anyone who might be interested, and feel free to post it, reprint it, or use it in the classroom."

Here is the link to the Op-Ed in the Baltimore Sun (dated the 18th)
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/oped/bal-op.usattorneys18mar18,0,6727658.story?coll=bal-oped-headlines



From The Baltimore Sun March 17, 2007

FRAUDULENT FIRINGS

By Paul Rogat Loeb


They just wanted to protect the sanctity of the vote. That’s the administration’s pious explanation for why they fired eight U.S. Attorneys who were Republican enough for Bush to have appointed them in the first place.

"The president recalls hearing complaints about election fraud not being vigorously prosecuted and believes he may have informally mentioned it to the attorney general,” explained White House spokeswoman Dana Perino.

How could you question such a laudable goal?

Of course the justifications keep shifting, as with the Iraqi war. First it was the general performance of the prosecutors. Then a preference for specific replacements. Now it’s concern for the democratic process.

But the administration and its allies have a long history of using the specter of election fraud to justify reprehensible actions. In 2000, Jeb Bush claimed to be fighting potential fraud when he purged over 55,000 voters from the Florida rolls for felony convictions that never applied under state law—or never existed to begin with (for instance if someone had a name similar to a convicted felon). Staffers of the data-collection firm that handled this effort acknowledged that the purges disproportionately targeted low-income Democrats, particularly African Americans. A follow-up by BBC investigative reporter Greg Palast found that 90 percent of those scrubbed were legitimate voters, enough by far to have made Al Gore the winner. And the Supreme Court that handed Bush the presidency was led by William Rehnquist, who got his start harassing black and Hispanic voters in South Phoenix as part of a Republican effort called Operation Eagle Eye.

Election fraud was also the watchword in 2004. Ohio Secretary of State (and Bush state campaign chair) Ken Blackwell claimed he was just protecting the legitimacy of the vote when he knocked 300,000 voters off the rolls in key Democratic cities like Cleveland, far exceeding Bush’s margin of victory. Blackwell also tried to reject new Democratic registrations because an arcane law said they were supposed to be on 80-pound paper stock (presumably more secure), then had to back off when his own official forms failed the same criterion. And he went to court to ensure that provisional ballots would be considered only if cast in the right precinct, defeating their key purpose, even as he sowed voter confusion by pulling machines and closing down polling stations in longstanding Democratic neighborhoods.

But maybe voting integrity really is the issue in the current wave of firings. In the same 2004 election, according to Mr. Palast in another BBC report, Karl Rove aide Timothy Griffin, just named the new U.S. Attorney for eastern Arkansas, originated a strategy to send 70,000 letters challenging the addresses of black and Hispanic voters in places like Florida’s Jacksonville Naval Air Station, a local homeless shelter, and the historically black Edward Waters College. As Mr Palast writes, Republicans sent the letters out with do-not-forward instructions. When they came back undeliverable, as when soldiers were deployed overseas, Florida then struck the voters from the rolls so even absentee ballots no longer counted. Maybe that’s what White House Spokeswoman Perino meant by showing concern for the sanctity of the vote.

If election fraud was a legitimate issue, such abuses might have a shred of legitimacy. Yet the documented cases of deliberate illegal voting are minuscule. For reports entitled “Securing the Vote” and “The Politics of Voter Fraud,” the think tank Demos and the civic involvement group Project Vote conducted national studies, seeking documented evidence of actual fraud. They ran comprehensive searches of newspapers and court records, contacted secretaries of state and state attorneys general. Except for cases involving a handful of isolated individuals, every rumor of illegitimate voting turned out to be baseless. The image of armies of unregistered, illegal, and dead people swarming the polls was and is a Republican myth.

But it’s a convenient one to try to damp registration and turnout. In Florida, Republicans created such draconian restrictions on registration drives that the League of Women Voters stopped their registration work. In Missouri then-governor John Ashcroft twice vetoed legislation that would allow groups like the League to register voters in inner city St Louis. In Maryland, Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr., a Republican, warned about voter fraud in opposing early voting. Ironically, his 2006 campaign and that of Republican Senate candidate and then-Lt. Gov. Michael S. Steele then bused in homeless men from Philadelphia to hand out misleading fliers in black neighborhoods featuring photographs of former Rep. Kweisi Mfume and Prince George’s County Executive Jack Johnson with the words "Ehrlich-Steele Democrats" — though Mfume and Johnson had unequivocally endorsed the Democratic opponents of Ehrlich and Steele.

As for the fired U.S. attorneys — in the end, what was their sin? It seemed that they weren’t sufficiently enthusiastic about joining compatriots who investigated or indicted local Democrats by a nearly five to one margin over Republicans, often with election eve headlines that melted away, along with their cases, as soon as the polls were closed. Some may have refused to go after Democratic groups who were trying to register voters, or in the words of fired US Attorney John McKay of Washington State, ”to drag innocent people in front of a grand jury” in a situation where “there was no evidence.” San Diego’s Carol Lam even had the audacity to prosecute Republican Congressman Duke Cunningham and begin to investigate Congressman Jerry Lewis.

Perhaps this solidly Republican group actually believed their job was to serve all of America’s citizens, instead of playing the role of political attack dogs. It’s too bad that couldn’t be the standard for the administration that terminated them.



Paul Rogat Loeb is the author of The Impossible Will Take a Little While: A Citizen's Guide to Hope in a Time of Fear, named the #3 political book of 2004 by the History Channel and the American Book Association. His previous books include Soul of a Citizen: Living With Conviction in a Cynical Time. See www.paulloeb.org To receive his monthly articles email sympa@lists.onenw.org with the subject line: subscribe paulloeb-articles

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rumpel Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-18-07 02:00 PM
Response to Original message
15. CO: The Supreme Court Denies Coloradans Standing to Challenge the State's Congressional Districting
Avoiding a Controversial Ruling Through a Jurisdictional Doctrine
By VIKRAM DAVID AMAR
----
Friday, Mar. 16, 2007

The Supreme Court last week handed down, but did not really decide, an interesting case involving Colorado's drawing of Congressional district lines. Because the Court said the plaintiffs lacked standing, it never reached the merits of the case.

The ruling, in Lance v. Coffman, reminds us how the Court often uses the flexible doctrine of "standing"to regulate its docket, and to selectively avoid weighing in on some contentious matters. The case also reminds us how many important and unresolved fundamental questions still remain concerning jurisdictional concepts - like a plaintiff's "standing" - that the Court rarely explores in helpful depth.

The Background of the Case: A Challenge to Colorado's Drawing of District Lines

The Lance case was brought in federal court by citizens of Colorado, to challenge the way the state had drawn its congressional district lines. Under the Elections Clause of the federal Constitution, the "Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives, shall be prescribed in each state by the Legislature thereof," subject to Congressional override.

Legislative gridlock in Colorado impeded the redrawing of federal legislative districts to accommodate the one additional Representative in Congress the state had obtained as a result of population growth revealed by the 2000 census. Accordingly, a state court - pursuant to state law that authorized judicial action in case of legislative stalemate - drew the lines.

http://writ.news.findlaw.com/amar/20070316.html
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Patsy Stone Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-18-07 06:07 PM
Response to Original message
16. NY: Delays hamper purchase of voting machines
http://www.uticaod.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070318/NEWS/70318003

March 18, 2007
JENNIFER FUSCO
Utica Observer-Dispatch

If the state Board of Elections certifies new voting machines, Oneida County could switch from its lever-style machines in time for the 2008 elections, officials said.

However, none of the new machines have been certified yet for the state, said Bob Brehm, deputy director of public information for the state Board of Elections. As a result, the county has held off on purchasing new machines.
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autorank Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-19-07 02:27 AM
Response to Original message
17. K&R Another outstanding news thread by ...fries n/t
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