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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (8976)8/18/2004 9:35:18 PM
From: Sidney Reilly  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
It's really beyond belief that this is happening in America. Bush is a fascist and we're going to see him throw off his disguise if he is re-elected.



To: Mephisto who wrote (8976)9/3/2004 11:48:24 AM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
Denying the Troops a Secret Ballot
The New York Times

September 3, 2004


Members of the military will be allowed to vote this year by
faxing or e-mailing their ballots - after waiving their right to a secret ballot.
Beyond this fundamentally undemocratic requirement, the Electronic
Transmission Service, as it's known, has far too many problems
to make it reliable, starting with the political partisanship of the
contractor running it. The Defense Department is making matters worse by
withholding basic information about the service, and should suspend it immediately.

The Defense Department is encouraging soldiers to use absentee
ballots or fax votes directly to local officials, when possible. But it also
provides an alternative: Omega Technologies, a private contractor,
will accept soldiers' faxed and e-mailed ballots on a toll-free line, and then
send them to the appropriate local elections office. Handling ballots
is always sensitive, but especially so when, as in this program, they are
not secret. An obvious concern is that votes for a particular candidate
could be reported lost in transit, or altered.

Omega Technologies is not an acceptable choice to run the program.
Its chief executive, Patricia Williams, has donated $6,600 in this
election cycle to the National Republican Congressional Committee,
and serves on the committee's Business Advisory Council. And while
everything about the conduct of elections should be open to public scrutiny,
Omega is far too secretive. In an interview, Ms. Williams refused
to say who would handle military votes, and whether they could
engage in partisan politics. "I will not allow the public to invade the privacy
of the employees of Omega," she said.

The secrecy of ballots could be breached at several points:

when they are faxed or e-mailed from the field, when they go through the
contractor and when they are received by local officials.
The Pentagon has not explained why it is acceptable, or legal, to ask soldiers to waive
their right to secret ballots. Laughlin McDonald, director of the
Voting Rights Project of the American Civil Liberties Union, says he cannot
recall another group of voters being asked to give up such secrecy.
It is particularly inappropriate, he says, for soldiers, who are under the
direct control of the Defense Department.

Nor is it clear that voting by nonsecret ballots is legal.
In Missouri,
one of two states that will allow votes to be e-mailed through the Pentagon
this year, the Missouri Supreme Court held as early as 1895 that
its State Constitution requires that voting be by secret ballot. North Dakota
has also approved the use of the e-mail voting system for military personnel;
about 20 states will allow them to vote by fax.

The Electronic Transmission Service operates with a lack of transparency
that is unacceptable in elections management. The Pentagon is
allowing Omega to keep its staffing secret. There are no provisions
for parties or candidates to inspect Omega's operations or monitor the
transmittal of votes. The Pentagon says the procedures for doing
so are an "internal working document," which it refuses to make public, and
it does not routinely make public how many ballots pass through
the system each year. The Electronic Transmission Service operated in
2000 and 2002, and in earlier elections, but Ms. Williams says Omega
did not handle ballots in those years. The Pentagon is refusing to say
who did.

The Defense Department has taken a "trust us" attitude. Soldiers
have to trust that military higher-ups will not try to learn their political
choices and hold it against them, and that local elections officials
at home will not reveal those choices. The voters have to trust that no one
at the contractor or the Pentagon will make errors, or intentionally
alter ballots. In a democracy, matters like these should not have to be
taken on faith.

Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company
nytimes.com