Verified Voting Logo
Contact VerifiedVoting.orgAbout VerifiedVoting.org
Join - Help us do this work!Donate - Help us do this work!Take Action Today!
Get E-Mail Alerts



Important Links

  • Election Day Problems?
    Call 1-866-OUR-VOTE
  • Find Your Polling Place: Vote411.org
  • Questions? Contact Us
  • Vote Trust USA - national resource for state-based organizations supporting verifiable elections, a Verified Voting Foundation project

  • S. 3212: A Step Backward for Voting System Transparency

    Contact: Pamela Smith - pam@verifiedvoting.org


    July 25th, 2008

    Download Verified Voting's complete statement on S. 3212

    On June 26, 2008, Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) and Senator Robert Bennett (R-UT) introduced the Bipartisan Electronic Voting Reform Act (S. 3212). The press release accompanying the introduction of S. 3212 observes “the ability to ensure there is an accurate, reliable and transparent method for Americans to cast and count votes is fundamental to our democratic process.” Unfortunately, S.3212 falls far short of ensuring accuracy, reliability, and transparency in our elections and is likely to do more harm than good.

    The bill contains some generally commendable provisions relating to election security (Section 4), voting system testing and certification (Section 5), and ballot layout design (Section 10), but the positive aspects of these provisions are outweighed by the problems created by many of the other sections of this bill. Despite its worthy motivations, the bill fails to carry out its objective.

    A number of troubling provisions require us to urge opposition to S. 3212:

    1. S.3212 allows “independent” vote records that would exist only in computer memory to be used to verify electronic vote totals.

    2. The non-paper verification methods allowed by S. 3212 would increase the costs and burdens of conducting elections without the benefit of increased confidence and auditability.

    3. Language in the bill would exempt from any verification requirement those paperless voting systems purchased before January 1, 2009 to meet HAVA's accessibility requirements. This would leave millions of voters (particularly those with disabilities) dependent on insecure paperless electronic machines for the foreseeable future.

    4. S. 3212 is opaque and disturbingly open to interpretation on a critical question: would the bill require that it be the voter that verifies the contents of the independent record?

    5. S. 3212 would not define the legal status of the independent record in the event of a discrepancy in vote tallies.

    6. The bill would not require states to use the independent records in post-election audits.

    7. S. 3212 would not require the EAC to adopt model audit guidelines for jurisdictions that use paper ballot optical scan technology (now the most common voting system in the United States) nor would it require optical scan paper ballots to be utilized in any audits conducted in those jurisdictions.

    8. S. 3212 is unclear regarding how its requirements would apply to accessible ballot marking devices.

    9. S. 3212 could restrict the publication of valuable information about the security and reliability of voting systems.

    10. S. 3212 would place a representative of the voting system manufacturing industry on the committee that drafts federal voluntary voting system guidelines.

    It is our view that all elections should be accessible, publicly verifiable, independently auditable, and as simple and cost-effective as possible, both to conduct and to audit. There is room for innovation, but innovation occurs even without such legislation, when demand exists. But we must take the necessary steps to safeguard all our elections—today, not years down the road. Yet this bill does not do that. Instead, it allows unverifiable systems to persist indefinitely.

    However well-intentioned, S. 3212, if enacted as written, would damage the transparency and reliability of Federal elections in the U.S. for decades to come. VerifiedVoting.org respectfully urges citizens and members of the United States Senate to oppose its passage.

    Download Verified Voting's complete statement on S. 3212

    State Pages

    See information for:

    Announcements

    November 10, 2011
    Controversy over voting rules and security
    November 9, 2011
    Democracy deficit at Americans Elect?
    October 28, 2011
    South Jersey voting-machine incident makes waves
    October 24, 2011
    How Voting Equipment Varies in the U.S.
    October 24, 2011
    At Issue: Has Voting Machine Integrity Improved?
    October 4, 2011
    What it takes to make every vote count
    September 26, 2011
    MIT to host Cal/Tech Voting Technology Project Seminar
    September 3, 2011
    Report on the Estonian Internet Voting System
    July 28, 2011
    TN: Election certainty needs a put-it-on-paper foundation
    July 4, 2011
    The New New Patriotism
    July 4, 2011
    Texas Supreme Court tosses NAACP challenge of electronic voting machines
    May 6, 2011
    O.C. could see fewer election recounts
    April 29, 2011
    Online voting is risky and expensive
    April 28, 2011
    Tennessee needs reliable paper ballots
    April 26, 2011
    TN: Reliable Returns
    April 21, 2011
    Do You Think It’s Because They Liked Florida?
    April 3, 2011
    The Asymmetrical Online War
    April 3, 2011
    Losing democracy in cyberspace
    January 13, 2011
    Voting Accuracy: Voice America interviews Congressman Rush Holt, Sean Flaherty of Verified Voting, and Sarah Vilms of Patton Boggs
    January 12, 2011
    E-mail voting clears committee, has easier path through Legislature



    RSS Feed - E-Mail This Page - Printer Friendly Version

    Verified Voting Foundation, Inc., is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation. The Verified Voting Foundation engages in educational activities permitted by IRS Section 501(c)(3). Please visit VerifiedVoting.org for info about 501(c)(4) lobbying activities. You can also visit Vote Trust USA, a project of the Verified Voting Foundation.

    © Copyright 2010, Verified Voting Foundation, Inc. All rights reserved, although reprint permission granted for nonprofit purposes with attribution to Verified Voting Foundation, Inc.


    Privacy    Site Map