Monday, January 24, 2005

Election Reform

Now that the inauguration is over, we can focus on election reform. The place to start is the computerized voting machines. A paper trail should be a minimum requirement, though it would be merely cosmetic since full hand-recounts are rarely accomplished, thanks to arbitrary deadlines or monetary concerns. Unfortunately, this is probably the only legislation with a chance of passing.

Perhaps more machines could be allocated in minority districts. The lines were unreasonably long and constitute in itself a clear case of disenfranchisement. However, if the machines can't be trusted, it wouldn't be reassuring to have more of them.

Voting machines need to be publicly owned, both touch-screens and tabulators. Allowing private companies to control source-code is a recipe for disaster; there's no accountability. This should be a non-partisan issue, and conflicts of interest should be avoided at all costs.

Provisional ballots should be minimized; 150, 000 in Ohio is unacceptable. This allowed too many votes to be taken off the table on election day. The 10-day wait before they could be counted was a true killer to John Kerry's chances to contest. They needed to be validated, but why so many in the first place? A provisional ballot should be a last resort, not standard. This is indicative of a problem with the whole process.

The best solution would be national mail-in voting, thus eliminating most of these concerns in one fell swoop. Also gone would be precinct location mix-ups and absentee ballot confusion. It has worked in Oregon for several years, as I can vouch. Getting nationwide support would be hard, though, unless a major scandal hits. I'm not holding my breath, but it wouldn't be surprising, since the scandals already exist.


Friday, January 14, 2005

First Post

This is my very first post in my very first blog! I'd like to cover so-called "conspiracy theories" from a moderate liberal point of view. The recent election is a good starting point. I'm just getting started, so bear with me.