By Common Cause
Posted on September 16, 2008, Printed on September 17, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/99052/
As election officials brace for record-breaking voter turnout on
Election Day, a close examination of voting preparedness in 10 swing
states shows that significant problems in the basic functions of the
American election administration system persist, and in a few cases
have worsened over the last few years, a new report by Common Cause and
The Century Foundation shows.
The
report, "Voting in 2008: 10 Swing States," examined what, if any,
progress has been made since 2006 in seven battleground states:
Florida, Georgia, Michigan, Missouri, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
In addition, Colorado, New Mexico and Virginia, whose new status as
likely swing states, and the potential for election administration
difficulties, have also been included.
The areas looked at
include: voter registration, voter identification, caging and
challenges, deceptive practices, provisional ballots, voting machine
allocation, poll worker recruitment and training, voter education and
student voting rights.
Results are mixed. Florida, Georgia and
Virginia stand out as the states with the most problematic voting
administration on a variety of criteria. This is especially worrisome
in Virginia given its new status as a key battleground state. Wisconsin
gets the most positive review overall for its good poll worker training
standards, excellent machine allocation standards, a solid deceptive
practices law and clear student voting rights. Ohio, which in 2004 was
the poster child for problems such as hours-long lines to vote and
voter challenges, is much improved, according to the report, with a
policy now to better handle challenges to voters, excellent poll worker
training standards and good information provided to voters. New Mexico
and Pennsylvania get mixed reviews for still having shortcomings such
as no deceptive practices law, but good poll worker training standards.
Colorado, Michigan and Missouri fall somewhere in the middle.
"While
some states have taken steps to improve their election procedures,
several still have a number of structural and statutory weaknesses that
put voting rights at risk once again this year," said Tova Wang, Common
Cause's vice president, a Century Foundation fellow and the report's
author. "In an election that we hope and expect will see unprecedented
turnout, we are hopeful that steps can still be taken to make the
election process a fair one for all Americans."
As hundreds of
thousands of new voters have been added to the registration rolls just
in the last few months, one troubling finding is that problems with
voter registration issues in many instances have gone unaddressed, or
even worsened in the surveyed states. Many states have flawed
procedures for matching the information voters give them when they
register with other state databases, and some have no established
protocols for doing so at all. Uniquely, Florida will continue to
require that prospective voters prove eligibility by providing the
exact information that appears on existing state databases. This policy
often results in rejections of valid registered voters if the voter
provides a variant of his or her name instead of a full name, a
clerical error is made on the election administration side, or a voter
makes another minor mistake.
Voting machine allocation - which
can contribute to long lines at the polls, another common problem of
the last two elections - also remains troublesome in many of the
states. Most have weak or no allocation laws, allowing each locality to
decide how many voting machines are necessary at each polling place.
For example, Pennsylvania, where voters waited on long lines in 2006,
has no allocation law, nor does Michigan. Wisconsin has the best one of
the states reviewed, according to the report
Voter ID rules and
requirements also remain problematic. Despite ever-mounting evidence
that fraud committed at the polls by voters is extremely rare, fraud is
still routinely used as a justification for passing harsh voter ID laws
that result in disenfranchisement, especially among minorities, young
people, the elderly and the poor. Georgia and Florida have the worst of
them. And even with states without strict ID rules, there is reason to
worry that poll workers and voters will misunderstand the rules leading
to disenfranchisement.
Another problem in 2006 was state laws
made it too easy to challenge a voter on a slim basis. The most famous
example of this was the challenge to 35,000 voters' eligibility to vote
in Ohio prior to Election Day. There are already indications that with
all the new voters registering, challenges to eligibility will be a
major issue again this year. None of the seven states reviewed in this
report have changed their laws since 2006 to lessen the chances of this
occurring, and of the three new states included, Colorado and New
Mexico have acceptable, though not ideal provisions to handle
challenges to voters, while Virginia's is fairly troubling.
But
progress has also been made, particularly in Ohio. Though still flawed,
the state did improve its law of handling challenges to voters in 2006,
and the law that has been clarified in a positive direction by the
secretary of state. Secretary Jennifer Brunner has also, through policy
directive, done much to address the state's potential machine
allocation issues. Ohio also now has good poll worker training
standards, including an online program, does a good job educating
voters about polling place information and registration and has a pilot
program to automatically update voter registration information.
To read the report by Common Cause and The Century Foundation, click here.
Common Cause is a nonpartisan, nonprofit advocacy organization founded
in 1970 by John Gardner as a vehicle for citizens to make their voices
heard in the political process and to hold their elected leaders
accountable to the public interest.