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12.17.07
ACLU Warns Officials Hasty Election Changes May Disenfranchise More Voters
CLEVELAND–Today, the American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio cautioned
elections officials that making drastic changes to voting technologies
could inadvertently disenfranchise more Ohio voters in the upcoming 2008
elections. In December 2007, Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner
issued a report outlining some of the security shortcomings of Ohio's
voting system. In addition, Brunner issued specific recommendations that
the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections adopt central count optical scan
technology in place of its current system.
At the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections' Dec. 17, 2007 meeting, ACLU
of Ohio board member Daniel Tokaji offered testimony pointing
out that the use of such technology may contribute to votes being lost
due to overvoting and undervoting, particularly in communities with
people of color. This directly ties in with claims the ACLU of Ohio made
in its case, Stewart v. Blackwell.
Toakaji said, “While the concerns Secretary of State Brunner outlined in
her report should be carefully considered, the recommendations to switch
technologies only months before the March primary could have disastrous
effects.”
The ACLU of Ohio filed suit against Ohio in Stewart v. Blackwell
after the 2000 presidential election exposed several constitutional
and statutory violations in the process by which elections were
conducted in several Ohio counties. Disparities between punch-card and
optical scanning and/or touch screen systems arbitrarily deprive voters
of the equal protection of the law and the right to due process. The
ACLU of Ohio won the case in the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, but it
was then declared moot because the state had changed voting technology.
Tokaji concluded, "Ohio has very real concerns with the upcoming 2008
elections, but changing technologies to a method that has been proven to
disenfranchise voters is not an adequate solution. Elections officials
should focus on the human element, including training and procedures for
those at the polls, in order to best impact elections."
Read the
testimony provided by ACLU of Ohio Cooperating Attorney Daniel Tokaji.
Read the
letter the ACLU of Ohio sent to Secretary of State Brunner and the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections.
Check out Daniel Tokaji's
blog on election related issues.
Get more info about the ACLU of Ohio's challenge to central count optical scan and punch card ballot technology in
Stewart v. Blackwell.
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