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Sen. Schumer seeks DOJ probe of Diebold’s sale of voting-machine business

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WillYourVoteBCounted Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-14-09 03:26 PM
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Sen. Schumer seeks DOJ probe of Diebold’s sale of voting-machine business
September 14, 2009
Senator Schumer seeks DOJ probe of Diebold’s sale of voting-machine business

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: September 14, 2009

SCHUMER URGES JUSTICE DEPT. TO PROBE DIEBOLD'S PROPOSED SALE OF ELECTION MACHINE BUSINESS TO ITS BIGGEST COMPETITOR; SAYS DEAL COULD HAVE 'ADVERSE CONSEQUENCES' FOR HOW AMERICA VOTES

Schumer, As Senate Rules Chairman, Raises Flags Over Proposed Merger On Antitrust Grounds

Says Deal Could Give One Company Control Over 75 Percent of Election Machine Market
Senator: Competition Is Needed To Reduce Chances of Widespread Election Fraud

WASHINGTON, DC – U.S. Senator Charles E. Schumer (D-NY), the Chairman of the Senate Rules and Administration Committee and a senior member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, raised alarm bells Monday over Diebold’s proposed sale of its voting machine business to its biggest competitor and urged a full Justice Department review of the deal, saying it could have “adverse implications on how our country votes.”

Earlier this month, Diebold announced it was selling its Texas-based subsidiary, Premier Election Solutions, to the country’s largest voting-machine manufacturer, Election Systems & Software Inc. of Omaha, Neb. The deal immediately sparked concern from election law experts since it would join Premier, which has a 33 percent share of the voting-machine market, with ES&S, whose systems were used in counting approximately 50 percent of all ballots cast in the last four major U.S. elections. Candice Hoke, an election law professor at Cleveland State University, told the Associated Press on Sept. 3 that the proposed deal represented “a massive consolidation of voting-system vendors.”

In a letter sent to Attorney General Eric Holder today, Schumer requested that the Justice Department’s Antitrust Division probe the deal based on anti-competitiveness concerns.

“If this acquisition proceeds, one company could control over three-quarters of the U.S. market for voting systems. Given other factors, including high barriers to entering the market, I am deeply concerned that local governments and taxpayers will not be getting a fair deal because too much market power will be held in too few hands,” Schumer wrote.

“It is in the public interest to maintain a range of choices in voting systems,” Schumer added, noting that increased consolidation in the election-machine market could make elections more susceptible to fraud.

A copy of Schumer’s letter appears below.

September 14, 2009

The Honorable Eric Holder
Attorney General
United States Department of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Avenue
Washington D.C. 20530

Dear General Holder,

I am writing today to express my concern with the proposed acquisition of the second largest voting system company by the largest voting system company. Last week, Election Systems & Software Inc. (ES&S) announced that it plans to purchase Premier Election Solutions, Inc., a subsidiary of Diebold Inc. This acquisition may have serious adverse implications for how our country votes. Since this industry provides a product vital to American governance, I am asking that the Antitrust Division examine this acquisition carefully to make sure there is no anticompetitive impact on election officials, states, or voters.

There is a history of concern over lack of competition in this industry. In 1997, American Information Systems purchased Business Records Corporation and became the company now known as ES&S. At the time, the Department of Justice intervened and forced a divestiture of the optical scan voting equipment business to another company, Sequoia Voting Systems. The concerns over consolidation have not abated in the past decade; in fact, the number of voting systems manufacturers is continually decreasing.

Elections are run by state and local election officials. Counties and cities have to purchase voting systems to count the ballots. A county may not be able to negotiate effectively against a company that controls the vast majority of voting systems in the country. ES&S, currently the largest election system company in the U.S., serves 1,985 jurisdictions in more than 43 states with approximately 67 million registered voters. ES&S systems were used in counting approximately 50% of votes in the last four major U.S. elections. Meanwhile, Premier Solutions has a 33% share of the U.S. market. If this acquisition proceeds, one company could control over three-quarters of the U.S. market for voting systems. Given other factors, including high barriers to entering the market, I am deeply concerned that local governments and taxpayers will not be getting a fair deal because too much market power will be held in too few hands.

It is in the public interest to maintain a range of choices in voting systems. Historically, states have used a wide variety of voting systems from a number of manufacturers. A 2003 Congressional Research Service report raised concerns over the consolidation of voting systems in the United States. The report indicates that having a diversity of voting systems in our country may decrease the likelihood of widespread election fraud. We need to do everything possible to make our elections reliable and secure.

As Chairman of the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration, I understand that following the new requirements in the Help America Vote Act, the voting system industry has gone through many changes. The largest of these changes is a new, more rigorous voting system testing and certification program. I am not without sympathy of the increased costs that accompany new federal testing requirements and that voting system companies must bear. However, that does not alleviate my concern of any one company obtaining such an outsized share of the market.

I ask that you perform a full and fair review of this proposed acquisition. We need to ensure that local governments can choose among a range of options for voting systems, that prices and services offered by these companies are competitive and fair, and that voters are assured that elections are secure and their tax dollars are being used wisely.


I look forward to hearing from you on this issue. If your staff has any questions, please contact my office at 202-224-6352.


Sincerely,


Charles E. Schumer
Chairman
Senate Rules and Administration Committee

###

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polichick Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-14-09 03:37 PM
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1. All these years later and we still don't have a uniform voting with paper trail...
I'm happy to see Schumer hasn't forgotten.
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mod mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-14-09 03:49 PM
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2. k&r
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midnight Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-14-09 03:59 PM
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3. Every little bit helps.
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katandmoon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-14-09 04:02 PM
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4. Isn't Diebold pro-repub? So don't hold your breath, Sen. Schumer.
Repugs are A-OK with Holder.
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snot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-14-09 04:22 PM
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5. K&R'd
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Stevepol Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-15-09 04:11 AM
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6. It's depressing that we're reduced to this argument in a so-called democratic country.
The argument is that we need competition among vote counters in order to have a fair election.

Nothing said about having verification, nothing said about insuring that the counting isn't programmed fraudulently, nothing said about the corrupting influence of a whole range of deceptive business practices (as already documented to be practiced ad nauseum by ES&S), nothing said about the ownership, the shoddy manufacture of machines that frequently don't work, nothing said about elections where the results are highly suspicious and yet the results can't even be recounted or audited.

No the main argument is that the consumer will be more satisfied if it can choose between providers, evidently because if one does not give the right result, the consumer can get another which will give the desired result.

The vote is something that should never have been, that should never be, privatized.

Where has the country come to?
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Land Shark Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Sep-16-09 01:41 PM
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7. The monopolistic concern is more that of VERTICAL monopoly, not "horizontal" monopy of mkt share
Each vendor with a contract has a vertical monopoly -- top to bottom -- on vote counting in the districts of their contract(s). This is the even bigger monopolistic concern, moreso than horizontal monopoly of market share. Assuming vote counting can be legitimately privatized (it can't) with secret vote counting to boot, then one might gravitate toward a single vendor, such as a single cable TV franchise, to have a monopoly which then results in much tighter regulation because market forces can't even be theorized to exist to provide any safeguards.
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