Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

ZOT! All the President's votes?
The Independent UK ^ | 14 October 2003 | Andrew Gumbel

Posted on 10/15/2003 12:48:06 AM PDT by althecat

All the President's votes?

14 October 2003

A quiet revolution is taking place in US politics. By the time it's over, the integrity of elections will be in the unchallenged, unscrutinised control of a few large - and pro-Republican - corporations. Andrew Gumbel wonders if democracy in America can survive

Something very odd happened in the mid-term elections in Georgia last November. On the eve of the vote, opinion polls showed Roy Barnes, the incumbent Democratic governor, leading by between nine and 11 points. In a somewhat closer, keenly watched Senate race, polls indicated that Max Cleland, the popular Democrat up for re-election, was ahead by two to five points against his Republican challenger, Saxby Chambliss.

Those figures were more or less what political experts would have expected in state with a long tradition of electing Democrats to statewide office. But then the results came in, and all of Georgia appeared to have been turned upside down. Barnes lost the governorship to the Republican, Sonny Perdue, 46 per cent to 51 per cent, a swing of as much as 16 percentage points from the last opinion polls. Cleland lost to Chambliss 46 per cent to 53, a last-minute swing of 9 to 12 points.

Red-faced opinion pollsters suddenly had a lot of explaining to do and launched internal investigations. Political analysts credited the upset - part of a pattern of Republican successes around the country - to a huge campaigning push by President Bush in the final days of the race. They also said that Roy Barnes had lost because of a surge of "angry white men" punishing him for eradicating all but a vestige of the old confederate symbol from the state flag.

But something about these explanations did not make sense, and they have made even less sense over time. When the Georgia secretary of state's office published its demographic breakdown of the election earlier this year, it turned out there was no surge of angry white men; in fact, the only subgroup showing even a modest increase in turnout was black women.

There were also big, puzzling swings in partisan loyalties in different parts of the state. In 58 counties, the vote was broadly in line with the primary election. In 27 counties in Republican-dominated north Georgia, however, Max Cleland unaccountably scored 14 percentage points higher than he had in the primaries. And in 74 counties in the Democrat south, Saxby Chambliss garnered a whopping 22 points more for the Republicans than the party as a whole had won less than three months earlier.

Now, weird things like this do occasionally occur in elections, and the figures, on their own, are not proof of anything except statistical anomalies worthy of further study. But in Georgia there was an extra reason to be suspicious. Last November, the state became the first in the country to conduct an election entirely with touchscreen voting machines, after lavishing $54m (£33m) on a new system that promised to deliver the securest, most up-to-date, most voter-friendly election in the history of the republic. The machines, however, turned out to be anything but reliable. With academic studies showing the Georgia touchscreens to be poorly programmed, full of security holes and prone to tampering, and with thousands of similar machines from different companies being introduced at high speed across the country, computer voting may, in fact, be US democracy's own 21st-century nightmare.

In many Georgia counties last November, the machines froze up, causing long delays as technicians tried to reboot them. In heavily Democratic Fulton County, in downtown Atlanta, 67 memory cards from the voting machines went missing, delaying certification of the results there for 10 days. In neighbouring DeKalb County, 10 memory cards were unaccounted for; they were later recovered from terminals that had supposedly broken down and been taken out of service.

It is still unclear exactly how results from these missing cards were tabulated, or if they were counted at all. And we will probably never know, for a highly disturbing reason. The vote count was not conducted by state elections officials, but by the private company that sold Georgia the voting machines in the first place, under a strict trade-secrecy contract that made it not only difficult but actually illegal - on pain of stiff criminal penalties - for the state to touch the equipment or examine the proprietary software to ensure the machines worked properly. There was not even a paper trail to follow up. The machines were fitted with thermal printing devices that could theoretically provide a written record of voters' choices, but these were not activated. Consequently, recounts were impossible. Had Diebold Inc, the manufacturer, been asked to review the votes, all it could have done was programme the computers to spit out the same data as before, flawed or not.

Astonishingly, these are the terms under which America's top three computer voting machine manufacturers - Diebold, Sequoia and Election Systems and Software (ES&S) - have sold their products to election officials around the country. Far from questioning the need for rigid trade secrecy and the absence of a paper record, secretaries of state and their technical advisers - anxious to banish memories of the hanging chad fiasco and other associated disasters in the 2000 presidential recount in Florida - have, for the most part, welcomed the touchscreen voting machines as a technological miracle solution.

Georgia was not the only state last November to see big last-minute swings in voting patterns. There were others in Colorado, Minnesota, Illinois and New Hampshire - all in races that had been flagged as key partisan battlegrounds, and all won by the Republican Party. Again, this was widely attributed to the campaigning efforts of President Bush and the demoralisation of a Democratic Party too timid to speak out against the looming war in Iraq.

Strangely, however, the pollsters made no comparable howlers in lower-key races whose outcome was not seriously contested. Another anomaly, perhaps. What, then, is one to make of the fact that the owners of the three major computer voting machines are all prominent Republican Party donors? Or of a recent political fund-raising letter written to Ohio Republicans by Walden O'Dell, Diebold's chief executive, in which he said he was "committed to helping Ohio to deliver its electoral votes to the president next year" - even as his company was bidding for the contract on the state's new voting machinery?

Alarmed and suspicious, a group of Georgia citizens began to look into last November's election to see whether there was any chance the results might have been deliberately or accidentally manipulated. Their research proved unexpectedly, and disturbingly, fruitful.

First, they wanted to know if the software had undergone adequate checking. Under state and federal law, all voting machinery and component parts must be certified before use in an election. So an Atlanta graphic designer called Denis Wright wrote to the secretary of state's office for a copy of the certification letter. Clifford Tatum, assistant director of legal affairs for the election division, wrote back: "We have determined that no records exist in the Secretary of State's office regarding a certification letter from the lab certifying the version of software used on Election Day." Mr Tatum said it was possible the relevant documents were with Gary Powell, an official at the Georgia Technology Authority, so campaigners wrote to him as well. Mr Powell responded he was "not sure what you mean by the words 'please provide written certification documents' ".

"If the machines were not certified, then right there the election was illegal," Mr Wright says. The secretary of state's office has yet to demonstrate anything to the contrary. The investigating citizens then considered the nature of the software itself. Shortly after the election, a Diebold technician called Rob Behler came forward and reported that, when the machines were about to be shipped to Georgia polling stations in the summer of 2002, they performed so erratically that their software had to be amended with a last-minute "patch". Instead of being transmitted via disk - a potentially time-consuming process, especially since its author was in Canada, not Georgia - the patch was posted, along with the entire election software package, on an open-access FTP, or file transfer protocol site, on the internet.

That, according to computer experts, was a violation of the most basic of security precautions, opening all sorts of possibilities for the introduction of rogue or malicious code. At the same time, however, it gave campaigners a golden opportunity to circumvent Diebold's own secrecy demands and see exactly how the system worked. Roxanne Jekot, a computer programmer with 20 years' experience, and an occasional teacher at Lanier Technical College northeast of Atlanta, did a line-by-line review and found "enough to stand your hair on end".

"There were security holes all over it," she says, "from the most basic display of the ballot on the screen all the way through the operating system." Although the programme was designed to be run on the Windows 2000 NT operating system, which has numerous safeguards to keep out intruders, Ms Jekot found it worked just fine on the much less secure Windows 98; the 2000 NT security features were, as she put it, "nullified".

Also embedded in the software were the comments of the programmers working on it. One described what he and his colleagues had just done as "a gross hack". Elsewhere was the remark: "This doesn't really work." "Not a confidence builder, would you say?" Ms Jekot says. "They were operating in panic mode, cobbling together something that would work for the moment, knowing that at some point they would have to go back to figure out how to make it work more permanently." She found some of the code downright suspect - for example, an overtly meaningless instruction to divide the number of write-in votes by 1. "From a logical standpoint there is absolutely no reason to do that," she says. "It raises an immediate red flag."

Mostly, though, she was struck by the shoddiness of much of the programming. "I really expected to have some difficulty reviewing the source code because it would be at a higher level than I am accustomed to," she says. "In fact, a lot of this stuff looked like the homework my first-year students might have turned in." Diebold had no specific comment on Ms Jekot's interpretations, offering only a blanket caution about the complexity of election systems "often not well understood by individuals with little real-world experience".

But Ms Jekot was not the only one to examine the Diebold software and find it lacking. In July, a group of researchers from the Information Security Institute at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore discovered what they called "stunning flaws". These included putting the password in the source code, a basic security no-no; manipulating the voter smart-card function so one person could cast more than one vote; and other loopholes that could theoretically allow voters' ballot choices to be altered without their knowledge, either on the spot or by remote access.

Diebold issued a detailed response, saying that the Johns Hopkins report was riddled with false assumptions, inadequate information and "a multitude of false conclusions". Substantially similar findings, however, were made in a follow-up study on behalf of the state of Maryland, in which a group of computer security experts catalogued 328 software flaws, 26 of them critical, putting the whole system "at high risk of compromise". "If these vulnerabilities are exploited, significant impact could occur on the accuracy, integrity, and availability of election results," their report says.

Ever since the Johns Hopkins study, Diebold has sought to explain away the open FTP file as an old, incomplete version of its election package. The claim cannot be independently verified, because of the trade-secrecy agreement, and not everyone is buying it. "It is documented throughout the code who changed what and when. We have the history of this programme from 1996 to 2002," Ms Jekot says. "I have no doubt this is the software used in the elections." Diebold now says it has upgraded its encryption and password features - but only on its Maryland machines.

A key security question concerned compatibility with Microsoft Windows, and Ms Jekot says just three programmers, all of them senior Diebold executives, were involved in this aspect of the system. One of these, Diebold's vice-president of research and development, Talbot Iredale, wrote an e-mail in April 2002 - later obtained by the campaigners - making it clear that he wanted to shield the operating system from Wylie Labs, an independent testing agency involved in the early certification process.

The reason that emerges from the e-mail is that he wanted to make the software compatible with WinCE 3.0, an operating system used for handhelds and PDAs; in other words, a system that could be manipulated from a remote location. "We do not want Wyle [sic] reviewing and certifying the operating systems," the e-mail reads. "Therefore can we keep to a minimum the references to the WinCE 3.0 operating system."

In an earlier intercepted e-mail, this one from Ken Clark in Diebold's research and development department, the company explained upfront to another independent testing lab that the supposedly secure software system could be accessed without a password, and its contents easily changed using the Microsoft Access programme. Mr Clark says he had considered putting in a password requirement to stop dealers and customers doing "stupid things", but that the easy access had often "got people out of a bind". Astonishingly, the representative from the independent testing lab did not see anything wrong with this and granted certification to the part of the software programme she was inspecting - a pattern of lackadaisical oversight that was replicated all the way to the top of the political chain of command in Georgia, and in many other parts of the country.

Diebold has not contested the authenticity of the e-mails, now openly accessible on the internet. However, Diebold did caution that, as the e-mails were taken from a Diebold Election systems website in March 2003 by an illegal hack, the nature of the information stolen could have been revised or manipulated.

(Excerpt) Read more at news.independent.co.uk ...


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Georgia
KEYWORDS: agitprop; ahole; blackboxvoting; breachbirthanoxia; cathycox; diebold; dieboldmemos; dirtyunderwear; dummy; dunce; dusrupter; elections; georgia; megazot; ozone; ozonealert; propaganda; roxannejekot; sandwichshyofpicnic; stikeupthebanned; superzot; syphilliticdementia; takeyourmeds; thisaccountisbanned; tinfoil; vikingkitties; zot; zotbait; zzzzooooottttt
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-6061-80 ... 101-111 next last
Hi,

I am a new poster to the Free Republic. And I am very interested in Free Republic members views on this article.

From what I understand this article - which appeared as a four page lift-out special investigation in the Independent Newspaper of London on Tuesday - led to an item on the subject being broadcast on Fox News yesterday evening.

This story is now clearly gaining traction.

By way of declaration of interest I am the editor of the Scoop.co.nz website in New Zealand and was involved in breaking this story. I also confess to being a regular poster over at DU (but I hope that my being a Kiwi - neutral territory presumably - might allow me the liberty of participating here too... I guess that will be up to the mods.)

Anyways... I will be checking into this thread and plan on participating in discussions of this issue over here if it is ok.

regards Al

1 posted on 10/15/2003 12:48:06 AM PDT by althecat
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: All
Donate to Free Republic, and Save Larry The Lobster!!!

Donate Here By Secure Server

Or mail checks to
FreeRepublic , LLC
PO BOX 9771
FRESNO, CA 93794

or you can use

PayPal at Jimrob@psnw.com

STOP BY AND BUMP THE FUNDRAISER THREAD-
It is in the breaking news sidebar!

2 posted on 10/15/2003 12:49:39 AM PDT by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: shaggy eel
N.Z. troll alert...
3 posted on 10/15/2003 12:55:08 AM PDT by stands2reason ("What you see at fight club is a generation of men raised by women." -- Chuck Palahniuk)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: JohnHuang2; MeeknMing
Ping?
4 posted on 10/15/2003 12:57:55 AM PDT by stands2reason ("What you see at fight club is a generation of men raised by women." -- Chuck Palahniuk)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: stands2reason
I prefer to see myself as a Hobbit.... but I can understand your feeling that way. In my defence this issue is not really a partisan one... everyone left or right needs their votes counted.
5 posted on 10/15/2003 12:58:13 AM PDT by althecat
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: althecat
Having read the Independent's biased reporting,I am on my guard.I know this,there has never been a perfect election,perfect polls and perfect voter interviews.

I recall in the late 40's the papers had Dewey wins on the front page(Truman won).I say to them.Clean your own house.
6 posted on 10/15/2003 12:59:03 AM PDT by MEG33
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: althecat
I also confess to being a regular poster over at DU (but I hope that my being a Kiwi - neutral territory presumably - might allow me the liberty of participating here too... I guess that will be up to the mods.)

If you want the mods to allow your participation, then I think that's great. But can you admit the mods at DU not as tolerant? Can you admit the bashing over there of anyone that even smells of conservative gets trashed and you think it's awful?

I personally think if you are willing to come here and make your points with regard to those that disagree and you debate fairly without childish attacks and name calling, then you are welcome.

If you think the DU standards should be applied here (personal attacks, not debating the issue, Bush=Hitler posts, etc.) then you should just give up.

7 posted on 10/15/2003 1:02:00 AM PDT by Fledermaus (Wake Up America, You're Dreaming!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: althecat
Do you honestly think that the President is involved in having voting machines programmed for Republican votes.I have some foil for your head to keep out harmful rays!
8 posted on 10/15/2003 1:03:14 AM PDT by MEG33
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: althecat
What's to discuss?

President Bush won the 2000 election several times already.
9 posted on 10/15/2003 1:06:13 AM PDT by k2blader (Haruspex, beware.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: althecat
This may be gaining traction in the UK but in America it is going nowhere.

The reason the polls in GA were off is they used faulty voter turnout information. They underestimated, as they often do, Republican turn out and underestimated 'rat apathy...especially the extremely anemic black turnout.

Just more goofy conspiracy theory for the 'rats who refuse to face reality. I can only pray the 'rats keep on drinking the Kool-Aid and deluding themselves. This particular conspiracy does not explain Republican gains in the rest of the nation in 2002. Nor does it explain Republican control in the US House and Senate in 2000, 1998, 1996, or 1994. It doesn't explain why Republicans have gained control of a majority of Governorships, state legislatures, and a majority of state legislators for the first time in since the Great Depression.

I only hope we have a long a run as the 'rats did.

10 posted on 10/15/2003 1:07:54 AM PDT by Once-Ler (Proud Republican and Bushbot)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: althecat
"everyone left or right needs their votes counted."
Yes even the people in our military that help protect that right. Maybe someone could for once ask why that didn't happen in 2002? (hint: because 'some' people knew which way most of them would have voted)
11 posted on 10/15/2003 1:08:13 AM PDT by Broadside Joe
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: MEG33
ROFL, don't you wish it was that easy? The Dems don't even want to force voters to prove who they are when voting by showing an ID in many states.

I'd love to have a basement full of geeky computer guys stealing elections from Dems instead of voting illegal aliens, voting in more than one precint (again, no ID required), and digging votes up in cemetaries (Democrats fight hard to stop states from removing dead people from the voting lists).

Yep, the Dems are worried. We've figured out how they steal elections and are countering them. Do you really think there were that many "hanging chads"? Do you know it's almost impossible NOT to poke a hole in perforated paper so thin, two ply toilet paper is thicker? The only way you can get "pregnant chads" is to put more than one ballot into the machine. Thus, Democrats claim they lost in 2000 because Gore only got 3 out of 5 votes every punch ballot voter cast using multiple ballots. That's how you find 95-105% percent "turnout" in several precints around the country.

12 posted on 10/15/2003 1:08:23 AM PDT by Fledermaus (Wake Up America, You're Dreaming!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 8 | View Replies]

To: althecat
Funny, but I seem to recall that one of the electronic voting machine companies donated cash to Gray Davis' "no on recall" campaign. Another electronic voting machine company funded a study which the ACLU has used to challenge punch card voting.

If anyone has cause to be worried about fraud, it is the Republicans, given the Rats' long and sorry history of stealing elections.

That said, vote counting shouldn't be the cause of partisan finger pointing. I believe that if our elections are to have integrity, a blue ribbon commission should be created to determine the best, most accurate, and fairest methods to count votes. Each party would appoint its own representatives to the commission.

I personally favor old fashioned paper ballots, along with strictly enforced rules to prevent illegal aliens, felons, etc., from voting.

13 posted on 10/15/2003 1:09:58 AM PDT by ambrose (Free Tommy Chong!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: althecat
It's great to see that the 'Pubbies are finally in the game. It's been discouraging to have to watch the 'Rats continually steal votes in election after election while the 'Pubbies were looking the other way.
14 posted on 10/15/2003 1:10:26 AM PDT by Neanderthal
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

Comment #15 Removed by Moderator

To: MEG33
It seems the standard anymore is to tar and feather the conservative right with the sins that the liberal is committing. There has been much in the way of voter fraud in recent years. However, in every case it is the left that is committing the fraud.

Friend, believe the fact that if there would have been even a hint of voter fraud from the right the Dems would have been in court before the day was out.

Godspeed, The Dilg
16 posted on 10/15/2003 1:14:53 AM PDT by thedilg
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 8 | View Replies]

Comment #17 Removed by Moderator

To: althecat
welcome to FR... you'll find the tenor quite different than that at DUh. ... and you don't have to fear being banned just for the crime of having a different opinion than some of the others here. Simply have respect when writing.

As far as the article: all the voting methods have their own inherent problems, and I don't doubt that touchscreens do, too. The "election fraud" fears angle being played up here is just great press, and stokes up the Demodogs, for sure. There is no way any amount of fraud by manipulating the machines is close to the good, old-fashioned fraud the Demodogs have been perpetrating since the old Daley Chicago days - vote every dead person at least twice, etc. - which certainly adds several percent to every Demodog candidate in every large urban area in this country - and the fraud committed by the lamestream media's distortions and liberal bias.
18 posted on 10/15/2003 1:17:51 AM PDT by AFPhys (((PRAYING for: President Bush & advisors, troops & families, Americans)))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Fledermaus
My alarms system is going nuts.New Zealander,The Independent,DU?.

I worry about voter fraud and not requiring ID.

I worry about dem ward healers busing people to polls after passing out cigarettes.I worry about any machine tampering,fraud or intimidation.

We have not been able to stop the Dems from doing this!!
19 posted on 10/15/2003 1:18:14 AM PDT by MEG33
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]

Comment #20 Removed by Moderator


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-6061-80 ... 101-111 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson