|
|
|
Hindering America's Vote
By Steven Hill August 24, 2004
The Help America Vote Act (HAVA), the electoral reform bill passed by
Congress in 2002, is a mixed blessing. In fact, HAVA never addressed the
most glaring problem of American election administration-the decentralized
election bureaucracy of more than 3,000 counties that run elections with
few national standards, no uniformity and little oversight.
HAVA does include some positive gains, but those have suffered from foot
dragging and stalled implementation. Here is a scorecard of HAVA implementation:
1. Electoral Assistance Commission: HAVA took a timid step of establishing
the most crucial component of good election administration, and what most
democracies already have-a national elections commission. The Electoral
Assistance Commission (EAC) was given limited powers to "assist"
states and issue voluntary guidelines. The Democratic Party appointed
its commissioners right away, but Republicans didn't appoint theirs until
January 2004. Four months before the November election, the EAC barely
functions with seven full-time staff members and a recently appointed
15-member technical standards committee.
2. Funding for new equipment and training: Congress allocated $4 billion
to replace antiquated punch-card voting equipment and to train poll workers.
The catch was that the money couldn't be allocated until the EAC commissioners
had been appointed. Hence, by stalling the appointment of their commissioners,
the Republicans also stalled the allocation of the money (surprise, surprise).
On June 17, the EAC finally sent $861 million to 25 states, but the allocation
comes too close to the November election. And training of poll workers
remains inadequate.
3. Provisional ballots: States now must allow voters to cast what is known
as a "provisional ballot" if they are not on the voter list
in their precinct, and election officials must validate or deny each provisional
ballot after the election before certifying winners. If used in Florida,
voters banned by the notorious felon blacklist could have cast a provisional
ballot. But implementation of the provisional ballot has been plagued
by the familiar pattern-lack of follow-through, lack of funding, and most
importantly, lack of national standards, producing little uniformity from
state to state. Some states allow provisionals to be counted if they are
filed in the wrong precinct, but at least 16 states throw them out. And
few states have worked out details on how to train poll workers to implement
provisional balloting, setting up the potential for a ballot-by-ballot
fight in any close election.
4. Statewide computerized voter lists: Despite the critics, statewide
voter databases are an important gain that make universal voter registration
possible as is practiced in many European democracies where 18-year-olds
automatically are registered to vote. Were this to happen in the United
States, 50 million voters would be instantly added to the rolls, many
of them young people and minorities. Yet no state has made any progress
with this HAVA mandate.
5. Having first-time voters who register by mail provide identification
at the polls: Requiring these voters to show proof of identity such as
a driver's license or electric bill was the most dreaded part of HAVA.
While it's supposed to apply only to first-time voters, that distinction
already has been confused or misused by poll workers during primary elections
this year, causing eligible voters to be turned away. Given how poorly
trained poll workers generally are, imagine the confusion this November
as some voters are required to provide IDs and others are not.
Here's one small example of how HAVA played out in a recent election.
In East Chicago, Indiana, Helen Hernandez was mistakenly asked to produce
identification in May's primary, even though she has lived there since
the '50s and has voted in just about every election. Hernandez complained,
but the poll worker rejected her protests and did not offer her a provisional
ballot, which HAVA requires when there is a dispute. Hernandez was on
a lunch break from her janitor's job and did not have time to retrieve
her identification.
Some of HAVA's provisions could be major steps forward in bringing U.S.
election administration into the 21st Century, setting a course that eventually
might put us on par with Brazil and India (both have national election
commissions that establish national standards and have been able to successfully
implement touchscreen-computerized voting without the conflict and controversy
it has produced in the United States). But sluggish implementation has
made the gains of HAVA largely ineffective. As a result, we are heading
into another presidential election with a Third World election administration
infrastructure. Can you say Florida Redux?
________________________________________
Steven Hill is senior analyst for the Center for Voting and Democracy
and author of Fixing Elections: The Failure of America's Winner Take All
Politics.
Back
to Official Viewpoints Page
|
| |
|
This website is volunteer managed, designed and donated.
Content is the sole responsibility of Democrats of Napa Valley Club.
Club Sponsored Napa Democratic Headquarters- 1408
Second Street, Napa
Democrats
of Napa Valley
Send mail to : DONV P.O. Box 206, Napa, CA 94559 Phone: 707-224-5700
|