Showing posts with label election 2012. Show all posts
Showing posts with label election 2012. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Local Anchorage TV Station Fights Citizens United With Free Airtime For Candidates

Jeremy Lansman, the owner of KYES television in Anchorage, and, from what I can tell, one of the few independent and locally owned television stations in the country, sent out emails to candidates yesterday.  He emailed those candidates running for the legislature who have emails listed with the Alaska Division of Elections.

Jeremy is a friend of mine and the information for this post comes from conversations and emails, including a Skype chat I recorded Monday evening July 16, which you can listen to below.

Essentially, as I understand this, each candidate can make video spots of 30 seconds.   Jeremy is allocating 10% of his ad time to this project. That comes to about two per hour.  If he has two candidates send him videos, that air time will be divided by the two equally.  If 30 respond, the available space will be divided evenly among all 30 of them.

This is a new project and there are still some things to work out.  It depends on the response.  He will allow people to turn in more than one video, or new ones as time goes by.   Any changes will be made at the next weekly schedule.   

His motivation comes, in part, from his lifelong interest in using radio and television to promote the democratic process. Jeremy, I've learned over the years, is something of a legend among those who know about community radio in the US.  You can read about more about his past here.

The free tv time is stimulated now by the threat of huge amounts of money anonymously spent on ads to attack candidates that seems to be the most talked about outcome of the Supreme Court's 2010 decision Citizens United.  

Just last night, the US Senate, on a party line vote, The Disclose Act, was voted down 51-43. (It used to be that a seven person margin was enough to pass a bill.  Remember those days?)  The bill would have required the disclosure of the names of people who contributed more than $10,000 to independent groups that air so called issue ads that are aimed at affecting elections. 

There was a late night Democratic telethon for the bill on CSPAN and apparently it will be reintroduced Tuesday.  The picture is a screenshot of Sen. Merkley of Oregon explaining how the Supreme Court has changed the Declaration of Independence opening words from "We the People" to "We the Powerful" in the mostly empty Senate chambers.

While the topic is important, I must admit it was not riveting television.  They had more time to talk than they were prepared to fill well.   Limiting politicians to 30 seconds, as KYES proposes,  while forcing a certain amount of superficiality, will also require candidates to distill their most important messages.


I was hoping to get this up as an audio file, but I'm having troubles doing that.  So it's video format, but just audio.  It's most of a conversation I had with Jeremy about how exactly he plans to make this work.  It gives you a sense of Jeremy's motivation and the experimental nature of this. 


Friday, July 13, 2012

141 "Potentially Uncounted Ballots" Found July 11 (From April Election)

The following press release came out this evening:



The email is dated July 13, 2012 6:29pm.  Friday night is typically a good time to bury a story, especially in the summer, but we shouldn't jump to conclusions.  If the ballots were discovered July 11, they've had two days to figure out what they had and how to announce it.


The Record of Inventory Checklist  is a table that came in pdf format.  I'm not quite sure what it means.    There is a column that says "No Zip Tie" which I'm guessing refers to the seals that were on each election sack to show they were sealed.  There are 22 check marks in this column. 

I did try to call the Clerk's office to get more information, but it's after office hours and no one answered. 

The photo is one I took on May 10, 2012 during the recount.  It shows a ballot bag with what I believe they mean by zip tie attached to the tag that identifies the voting location. The arrow is pointing at the clear plastic zip tie.  Conversation I overheard at the time said it was pretty easy to take these off and redo them, but I didn't see a demonstration of that so I can't be sure.


It would seem that in terms of the election outcome, 141 votes won't affect the outcome of any specific race.  But this would seem to be one more example of the general sloppiness of the handling of the election.  The Assembly's attorney has met once with the citizen's group that called for the election recount to go over the many specific problems they raised based on their observation of the recount.  That meeting gave me some confidence that at least the Assembly's Attorney is taking this seriously and I believe that the new Municipal Clerk is as well.  This election has exposed a whole array of potential weak spots that someone intent in stealing an election could take advantage of.  Given that voting is the fundamental means of participating in a democracy, I believe it's critical that every single one of these breaches is fixed before the next Municipal election and that the state Division of Elections is paying close attention.

Monday, July 02, 2012

Hensley Report on Election Now Available - Form Over Substance

The Municipal Attorney's office has released Judge Dan Hensley’s review of the April 3, 2012 Election.   It's structured nicely and touches on many of the issues, but doesn't tell us anything new and doesn't take any kind of serious stand on anything.  He does say there is an additional addendum still to come on the Data Processing Review Board that used to monitor the voting machines but was eliminated. 

I've got the whole report posted (thanks Scribd) below.  And then a few thoughts of my own at the end.

From the summary:

1.    Nothing intentional was done
2.    The Deputy Clerk in charge made mistakes
3.    The Clerk should have supervised more carefully
4.    They should make changes in the rules.

In the body it does discuss the Minnery email (but doesn't mention names) and the broken seals on the ballot boxes, but just says, they happened.  For the seals, it says to tell election workers to follow the rules next time.

While he says he did some interviews, "The information I learned in my interviews did not differ in any significant respect from that contained in the Commission's summaries.  For this reason, in addition to my own interviews I relied on the Commission's summaries." But we don't know how many interviews, who, or what he asked and what they said.  And we know the Commission told the Assembly no seals were broken.  (Hensley does recognize that there were broken seals.)

Hensley Report on Anchorage Municipal Election July 2012


When the citizens group that originally called for (and ponied up $1500 to have 15 precincts recounted) met with the Assembly's Attorney and turned in a very detailed report of problems, I suggested in that post that it would be interesting to compare what they presented to the Assembly for free to the $30,000 report this retired judge presents.

The Assembly eventually voted to refund the $1500.

The contrast between the two reports raises serious questions about how money is spent for 'experts' rather than for good quality products.  This new report doesn't tell us anything we didn't already know and has none of the details that the Citizen group provided.   It would be interesting to know exactly how much time Hensley actually spent on this and who he interviewed.   As an outsider he seems to have gone over all the information that was already known and summarized it.  This is a great example of form over substance.


Monday, June 18, 2012

William Cruz Wants You To Vote

William Cruz, in the video below, says he set a goal to register 100 new voters.  Since we did the video last Friday, he says he's gotten six so far.

This is a democracy, and William and I agree on the point that voting is important.  If you don't vote, you've given up.  Many argue that there are no good choices.  I would argue that when we are down to two candidates, there's generally a better and worse candidate.  But I'll acknowledge that the current system sets up all candidates to be in debt to the people who fund their campaigns.   And so they are required to be polite and responsive to those who pay.  And to spend an obscene amount of time raising money instead of legislating or governing.  The Citizens United case is making money even more important.

But the fact of the matter is that a democracy doesn't work if people aren't involved.  Our last Municipal election, 65% of eligible voters didn't vote.

Say there's a storm coming and your house might get flooded.  You can get things out or move them upstairs.  You can put up sandbags.  It won't be easy. You can work your tail off attempting to save your house or you can just give it up and say it's impossible.

Giving up on democracy is a pretty radical concession. But we are facing a flood.  The current Supreme Court has made some critical decisions, starting with Bush v. Gore and including Citizens United. If the next Supreme Court justice is of the same ideology as the Citizens United majority, our chances at saving Democracy get even slimmer.*  If we keep electing enough people who vote to protect the 1%, life in the US is going to get grittier and grittier for the other 99%.

If the candidates aren't any good, then it behooves people to make sure good candidates run.  Voting is important, but we also have to get good candidates on the ballot and help make sure they get elected.  We simply have no choice but to be involved unless we just give over our governments (the various local, state, and the federal governments) to those with deep, deep pockets.   Our job is a lot easier than it was for individuals to fight the Nazis or to help slaves escape from the South or to demand change in Egypt*.  It involves investing time and money in good candidates.

We aren't risking our lives. Or even giving up much of what we have. At least not yet. OK, that's my soapbox for today.  Here's William's story.  The last minute or two is in Spanish.




 I should disclose that William took two classes from me a six or seven years ago and that he did invite me to do this video. We did a couple of questions more than once and I picked what I thought would best tell his story.

*OK, I know that these statements sound fairly absolute but I recognize that the scourge of many right wing politicians - the ACLU - was on the winning side of Citizens United, so it's more complicated.  The idea of corporate personhood is not something the court created.  The change in Egypt is not necessarily going to be for the better.  So, I'm letting you know that I know down here.

Friday, June 15, 2012

Citizen Group on Election Meeting Now with Assembly Attorney

I'm at the City Hall listening in a a meeting between the Citizens Group that ponied up the $1500 to pay for the recount of 15 precincts from the April Municipal election.

This post is being written on the fly.  So bear with they typos.  Plus I got to this meeting late because I had a previous meeting so I might have missed something that happened before I go here.  The meeting is still going on. 



People here include  most of the Citizens Group folks,  the Assembly attorney Julia Tucker, the Municipal Clerk-to-be Barb Jones, and two other employees of the clerk’s office who have worked on elections, and two Assembly members - Harriet Drummond and Dick Traini - and a representative of the ACLU.  








The citizens group presented a 110 page report of concerns and recommendations to make future municipal elections more secure.

It will be interesting to compare this report created by volunteers who paid, as a group, $1500 to have the election recounted, to the official report the Muni is paying up to $30,000 for.  I understand the two reports aren't reviewing exactly the same thing.  








There were six different topics identified in newsprint on the wall:

1.  Accuvote issues


2.  Protocols for
    a.  recount
    b.  ballot accountability
    c.  Precinct stamp to track ballots and questioned ballots by precinct
    d.  determining # of ballots by precinct
    e.  Training
    f.   procedure for hand count






3.  Title 28
    a.  ballot accountability report
    b.   determining # of ballots by precinct
    c.   Election worker/trouble shooter training
    d.   28.50.090  suspect qualifications
    e.   % of precincts that should be counted by hand
    f.    Recount - absentee and Questioned ballots 
          28.90.040C  needs to conform and make sense with the code
                 clarify “separate precinct” when they are pooled
4.  Questioned Ballots
    a.  to be counted by precinct or race
    b.  if precinct, then machine count or hand count?
    c.  what is NOT a questioned ballot?
    d.  numbering questioned ballots envelops
    e.  if by precinct, then
        1.  where voted
        2.  where actually reside

5.  Value Issues
    a.  Security, space, organization
    b.  Ballot bag review
    c.  Public observers/Tech for machine programming
    d.  Ballots should be numbered/ not stub only

I must say that the tone in this room is very open and people are listening to each other and asking serious questions about the problems being raised and how to resolve them in the future.   I've got some video which is not comprehensive, but which does give a sense of the tone of the meeting.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Blog Contest: How many dandelions are in the bag?



 Be the first to get the right answer and win a prize.  Details below.

This contest arose when I saw the yellow flowers in the lawn.  Pick them now, this voice said, or they will multiply beyond counting.  OK, I’ll pick 200 today and maybe get my wife to do another 200 and keep that pace until they are gone.  [I know, purists dig the whole plant out of the ground, including the long deep roots.  That’s just not going to happen.  I can do the minimum which is stop the seeds from forming and blowing all over.]

So I got a bag and started picking and counting.  I stopped at one point and took the picture below just to have a record of what I’d done - besides the bag. 


   


As I counted toward my 200, my mind wandered to the recent election and the problem of counting the ballots.  Would readers challenge my count?  How could I prove how many dandelions were in the bag?  And I found myself picking not just yellow dandelions, but also dandelion buds that hadn’t opened yet, and dandelion flowers that had finished, but not yet turned to seedballs.  Do all three all count?  In the ultmate number in the bag? 

If someone challenged me, could we do a recount?  Maybe I should build a dandelion counting machine.  I could put them in the machine to verify the handcount. 

Was it necessary to count at all?  Couldn’t I use the picture of a patch of dandelions and see how many dandelions were in six square feet of lawn?  We could, but not every six square foot patch had the same number of dandelions. 

How important is it to be exact?  Well, if I have a contest and four people were within five or six dandelions from the exact number, surely they would want to be sure that the person who was the closest won.  Unless, of course, they were close but not the closest.  Then a miscount might make them the winner.

In the recent election, assuming that no voting machines were hijacked, the margins of victory were high enough that miscounting by three or four, even 20 votes, wouldn’t have mattered.  It was close enough to know who won.  But what happens when the elections are closer?  Where three votes off would change the winner? 

And because we have machines, we need to do hand counts regularly because that seems to be the only way to be assured that none of the machines were hijacked.  I tend to think this didn’t happen in this election, but I also have no patience with people who dismiss this possibility completely.  It’s more than a theoretical possibility.  It’s happened in other locations using the same machines.  If you haven’t watched the film Hacking Democracy, (it's free online at the link) I think you have no standing to dispute me on this.  If you have watched it, and still think it’s impossible or even unlikely, then tell me why.  People are spending billions of dollars to get their favored candidates elected.  Why wouldn’t they be likely to try to tamper with the cards in the voting machines? 



CONTEST DETAILS

OK, back to the important things.  How many dandelions are in the bag? 

How to participate:

1.  Post your answers in the comment section.  You can post anonymously if you like, but you need to sign a name (any name you like) and city (real city) in the comments.
2.  Email me to let me know that you made a comment, the number of dandelions, the name you used, and the city. 

Deadline:  Thursday, May 31, 2012 5pm Alaska Daylight Savings Time.

Prize: 
For people near Anchorage - I'll take you to dinner at the Thai Kitchen.  (People in the Seattle or LA areas, we can possibly work a dinner somewhere in late June.)
For others:  I’ll make and send you five hand made greeting cards using images you choose from this blog. (I have most, but not all, in high enough resolution to do this.)

Verification/Security:  
Although this contest has relatively minor consequences, it seems important, even here, to have reasonable security measures, so that you can be assured the contest is not rigged in any way.  Therefore, I have emailed the actual number to an Anchorage expert on plant biology.   I won't name her now so people do not pester her for the number (which she wouldn't give anyway.) 


Additional notes:
1.  I went well beyond 200.
2.  There will be no recount of the dandelions, but you can have the bag of dandelions if you pick it up or pay for shipping.

Saturday, May 19, 2012

What's Happening With The Anchorage Election?

Recount Tally sheet Mayor's Race










A friend emailed me to ask what was going on since there wasn't much in the newspapers.  I was an observer the afternoon of May 10 and I've been trying to put together a post describing what it was like.  A brief preview
  • Observers were given total access to watch the account, take pictures, take video, ask questions (if it didn't disturb actual counting) and the counters were patient and thorough in answering questions.
  • Some counters were better than others.
  • There hasn't been a recount in a long time and those were for individual close races, not for the whole thing.  This one has only been for 15 precincts.  That means that except for very brief descriptions in the Municipal Code, there are not guidelines for how to do this.
  • Thus, a lot of what going on was learning by doing.  Different pairs of counters used different techniques.
City Hall Room 155 - Hand Counting Ballots



Inside "the Vault"
I had the feeling that while some security measures were in place, there were a lot of points where there process was vulnerable.   It felt like Alaska in the old days when everyone knew each other and people didn't lock their doors. I don't think anyone exploited the weaknesses this time, but the recount gives the Muni an opportunity to figure out how to lock all the doors and windows for next time.  Voting machines are too vulnerable to hacking.    The 'vault' (that's what they called it) where they stored the ballots, was actually just a small room on the ground floor with windows along the outer walls.  Using the word 'vault' was probably not a good idea because it conjures up an image of a windowless metal chamber with a giant lock on it. 

Since the Muni has posted a preliminary report  which identifies some sizable gaps in a couple of precincts between the voting machine count and the recount.  Not enough to change any race, but enough to raise questions that need to be addressed.  Some of the precincts were recounted a second time because of discrepancies between the voting machine count and the recount numbers.  

I was told that the newly elected school board candidates have had their swearing in postponed once again.  It won't happen this Monday and the following Monday is Memorial Day.

The Clerk's office is going to hold a press conference on Monday morning.  

Black Diebold bag with Service High ballots


Mel at Bent Alaska has been doing the very best job on the election and you can see her post on the recount that is much more detailed than mine.


Sunday, May 13, 2012

Suppose Someone Found a Body . . .

Maybe in the bushes near a bike trail through the city.  It wasn't clear how the person died.  There were some bruises.  Did the person fall?  Was the person hit?  Was it hypothermia? Is our basic instinct that everyone is honest and no one would kill anyone?  No.  We know there are nasty folks out there. Maybe in the bushes near a bike trail through the city.  It wasn't clear how the person died.  There were some bruises.  Did the person fall?  Was the person hit?  Was it hypothermia? Is our basic instinct that everyone is honest and no one would kill anyone?  No.  We know there are nasty folks out there.
All the Anchorage Police department needs is "reasonable suspicion" to launch a criminal investigation.  Less than the higher level proof "probable cause" required to charge someone with a crime.  Which is less than the "proof beyond a reasonable doubt" for a murder conviction.

The Nitty Gritty:  This is a long post.  There are two key questions:
  • Does the Anchorage Assembly have the power to call a recount at an election?
  • Should it have that power?

Can you imagine the police department saying, "Well, there are some irregularities, but we'll only conduct an autopsy if a citizen is willing to pay for it"?   A group of citizens, concerned that foul play might be involved here, comes forward but they can only raise $1500.  So the crime lab says, "For $1500 we can check two internal organs, or we could examine the head, or we could check on the broken leg bone.  Which shall it be?"


That's pretty much what has happened in Anchorage over the last five weeks. Despite many election irregularities, the only way to get a recount was if citizens paid.  In an email to the ten citizens who called for a recount, and ponied up the $1500 necessary to recount 15 precincts, Assembly Chair Ernie Hall wrote:
I deeply thank you and the other nine outstanding citizens who filed the application for the recount. Without your successful application, Municipal election code would not have permitted a recount.  [emphasis added.]
There was an election with many (we don't know how many exactly) voters turned away from the polls because there weren't enough ballots.  There was at least one voting machine with a broken seal. When the election commissioner said at an Assembly meeting that there were no broken seals , and the election worker who had reported the broken seal  stood up to protest, she was removed from the meeting. [At Tuesday night's Assembly meeting the chair of the Assembly apologized to the election worker who had been ejected last week.]

The technical review board, made up of IT experts, that used to test the machines before and after the election, was disbanded a few years back.  There was a religious group that knowingly sent out false information encouraging people to register to vote on election day.  Why do I say knowingly? Because they had previously informed their people that they had to register 30 days in advance, which is what the law says.

There are other clues that suggest that the voter counts may be funny.  A poll taken less than a week before the election found a controversial proposition on the ballot leading with 50% yes to 41% no.  It lost 58% to 42% and the pollster acknowledged he couldn't recall a poll that was that far off from the actual outcome.  Parks and Recreation bonds that normally just squeak by or lose, won with large majorities.

Was the city going to do an autopsy of the election?  The election chief defended the electronic voting machines on the grounds that you can check them by counting the ballots.  But unless a group of citizens put up $100 per precinct, the city was not going to count any ballots.  They would have a retired judge check out irregularities after the election was certified and there was no guarantee the ballots would survive 30 days after the certification.

And in Wednesday's ADN, Kyle Hopkins reports that Ernie Hall said that the judge's investigation would not look into "the technical performance of the voting machines."  He did say that might be pursued by the Assembly's Ethics and Election committee with the State of Alaska.

OK, this is not black and white.  When the police find a body, they don't necessarily know if it was natural causes, an accident, or murder.  And with the recent election, we don't know if the problems were incompetence, lack of resources, or intent to disrupt or to corrupt the election.  But there's enough evidence that something(s) serious has occurred.  But unlike when we find a dead body and people immediately wonder about foul play, with the election, people's assumption (at least the officials) seem to be to dismiss the possibility of foul play.

However this turns out, there are several issues involved here:


1.  Certification of the election

The legal opinion the Assembly got from a private, contracted attorney, Tim Petumenos, basically said that unless any wrong doing could have affected the outcome of the election, the Assembly was required to certify the election.
Errors in conducting the election which are not targeted to bring about a particular result are treated differently than those which appear to be aimed at affecting the outcome. Outright corrupt or criminal conduct which may have been aimed at affecting the outcome of  an election is insufficient ground to invalidate an election unless the conduct reasonably had the potential for changing the outcome.
The rationale the Assembly made was that none of the contests on the ballot were close enough to be affected.  This is probably true.  But can you actually know before you investigate?  Unless tampering with the voting machines was at the serious number level, combined with disenfranchising of the people who didn't vote because of the shortage of ballots.  The Assembly did certify the election, but conditionally, depending on the result of the recount.

2.  Questions about how the election was administered

This would look at the procedures that led to the shortage of ballots and the inadequate response when the clerk's office began to hear about the shortages.  It would be looking at other administrative ways to make future elections problem free.

3.  Questions about the security of the voting machines. 

There are two levels of questions here:
A.    Local Issues.  How are the machines and ballots handled in Anchorage?  There were reports of broken seals and that the election chief told election officials not to worry about that.  There are questions about where the machines were stored and the security of the ballots from the moment they left the, assumed, safety of the Clerk's office until they are used by the voters, and until it is certain that they are no longer needed to confirm that the voting machines counted the votes properly.
B.    National Issues.  Nationally, voting machines have had problems.  There are security issues about people tampering with the hardware and software.  Brad Friedman is an expert on election fraud and voting machine problems, who writes Bradblog. He has been watching the Anchorage election closely.  Reports on past national voting machine problems can be found at the Center For Voting Technology Research. 
Or you can watch the video Hacking Democracy.

4.  Questions about what looks like an attempt to disrupt the election.  
Jim Minnery of the Alaska Family Council sent emails out to his list telling people to register 30 days before the election or they couldn't vote.  Then just before the election he sent another email telling people they could register and vote on the day of the election.  I don't claim to know what his intentions were, but the more ineligible voters to come to the polls and take up the time of election officials, the harder it would be for regular voters to vote.  This should certainly be on the investigator's list of issues to investigate.  And it appears, from the ADN article to be on the list. 




Back to the autopsy-vote count analogy.

Remember what Ernie Hall said in the email cited at the beginning?
Without your successful application, Municipal election code would not have permitted a recount.
Really?  Is it true the Code wouldn't permit a recount?  The Assembly got advice from the Municipal Attorney and from a privately contracted law firm. 

The Petumenos  Report (the contracted report) said that the Assembly had to certify the election unless there were issues that could change the result.  Much of it focuses on the responsibility of the Assembly to certify the election, unless there was evidence to suggest that the election outcome would have changed.
"Inconvenience to voters is not sufficient.  Errors in conducting the election which are not targeted to bring about a particular result are treated differently than those which appear to be aimed at affecting the outcome.  Outright corrupt or criminal conduct which may have been aimed at affecting the outcome of an election is insufficient ground to invalidate an election unless the conduct reasonably had the potential for changing the outcome.  This is true even when people may go to jail for their wrongful conduct."

If the Petumenos Report,  discusses whether the Assembly can, on its own, call for a recount, I didn't find that part.  The Municipal Attorney's Memorandum to the Assembly addressed the following questions:
A.  When voters are denied the opportunity to vote because of a lack of ballots, what are the standards and remedies applied by the courts in determining whether a new election is required?
B.   May the Assembly call for a special election  even if the failure is not sufficient to change the outcome? 
A quick review of the report didn't turn up a prohibition on the Assembly calling for a recount.  It's not clear to me why Ernie Hall said there could not be a recount unless the citizen group called for one.  The Municipal Code does not explicitly say the Assembly may or may not call for a recount.  It does give three situations which require a recount.

The Municipal Code allows for defeated candidates and groups of ten citizens to call for a recount.  It also says that the Clerk 'shall' initiate a recount if there is a tie.

From the Municipal Code Chapter 28: Elections




A.
Within five days after the election commission has adopted its report of the results of the election, a defeated candidate or ten qualified voters may file an application with the municipal clerk for a recount of the votes from any particular precinct, or for any particular office, proposition or question. The date on which the municipal clerk receives an application rather than the date of mailing or transmission determines whether the application is filed within the time allowed under this subsection.
B.
If two or more candidates tie in having the highest number of votes for the same office, to which only one candidate is to be elected, the municipal clerk shall initiate a recount.


The Code above does not explicitly give the Assembly the power to order a recount.  Nor does it prohibit the Assembly from initiating a recount. 

Changing Times, Changing Needs  -   From deciding close races to testing voting machine integrity

The recount ordinance comes from the pre-voting machine era.  The intent of this part of the ordinances was to resolving close elections.  It gives a losing candidate or citizens the right to call for a recount, at their expense, to double check that the votes were counted right.

But another reason to recount by hand in 2012 is to check the accuracy of the voting machines.  There were revisions to the ordinance in 2001.  Although the 2001 revisions came after Florida election fiasco in the 2000 presidential race, the amendments to the much older basic law  were to add language necessary to accommodate the introduction of voting machines to Muni elections.

Under Ernie Hall's interpretation, if the election is not close, the Assembly couldn't order a recount, even if there were a Youtube of people tampering with the machines.  The assumption was made in this election that the margins of victory were so large that the outcome of an election wouldn't change, even with a recount.  But that, I think, was based on the paradigm in place before voting machines and their vulnerability to tampering were widely known.  (Actually that vulnerability still isn't widely known which is why I recommend you watch the movie Hacking Democracy.)  But today, when hackers could reprogram the voting machines to, say, give every fourth vote for Party X to Party Y, it's possible that there could be significant deviations in the actual count.

Since the Assembly is the body that makes the law, it would seem, in this case, they could choose to interpret the  existing code, given its ambiguity here, to allow them to recount the ballots.  It would take as many votes to approve recounting the votes as it would take to amend the ordinance to explicitly allow it.  And since elections are the Assembly's responsibility, a mayor is probably wise not to veto such an ordinance.

The ballots are the body of the election

In a sense, the marked ballots are the corpse. It's difficult to prove the intent of a criminal. The ballots are the forensic evidence of the integrity of the voting machines.  If the ballots demonstrate that the voting machines were highly inaccurate, then suspicion shifts toward misdeeds.   But, if the hand count of the ballots matches the count of the machines, distrust can be more easily dispelled.  But if the ballots aren't kept securely, are allowed to deteriorate,  or are destroyed, it's much harder to identify criminal intent.


So where are we now?

1.  There were a number of irregularities in the election, some identified above
2.  There's a recount going on now of 15 precincts which should tell us if there is a significant discrepancy between the machine count and the hand count of the ballots in this sample of precincts.  This sample wasn't scientifically chosen, so it's not clear whether no serious problems in this sample can be seen as an indicator that the other 106 precincts were also without serious problems.
3.  There will be an investigation by retired Judge Daniel Hensley.  It's unclear whether he will have the time or inclination or resources to do a comprehensive investigation.  As mentioned above already, according to the ADN story "the judge's investigation would not look into "the technical performance of the voting machines."

Given the broken seal report, the loss of the technical review board, and the general concerns about security that have surfaced around the country, it would seem appropriate that someone is looking into the kinds of precautions the necessary to prevent hacking into the Anchorage (actually the State of Alaska's) voting machines.  Even if the recount does not indicate evidence of hacking this time (a likely outcome in my mind) that doesn't mean they couldn't have been hacked.  This is a good opportunity to review their security.


Almost to the end (if you're tired from reading this far, think how I feel)

This post covers a lot of ground.  Not too many people will get this far.  Perhaps it will be of use to the investigator.  There were lots of problems in the election.  A key one I focused on here is the inability of the Assembly to call for a recount on its own.  The integrity of our elections shouldn't be dependent on 10 citizens coming forward with enough money to call for a recount.  If there are enough suspicious circumstances, the Assembly should know it has the power to order a recount to check the integrity of the machines.

Monday, May 07, 2012

The Supreme Court Substitutes Amended Proclamation Plan for Redistricting Board's Interim Plan - Hearing Thursday 10am

The Alaska Division of Elections pointed out that the original date set for oral arguments before the Supreme Court - the week of May 21 - was too late for the Division to be ready for the candidate filing deadline of June 1 for the November 2012 election. They needed to know the districts by May 14, 2012.

 The Alaska Supreme Court has moved the hearing up to Thursday May 10, 2012 at 10 am (originally 9:30, then moved to 10.)

 The focus is on the Interim Plan - the plan to be in place until the final plan can be cleared for compliance with the Voting Rights Act AND the Alaska constitution.

The Board created an Amended Proclamation Plan (the original plan was rejected by the Supreme Court) and an Interim Plan.

The interesting part of the Court’s order is that they are asking the parties to argue why the Amended Proclamation Plan (not the Interim Plan) should not be used as the Interim Plan. I haven’t had much time to mull this over. A couple consequences I can think of immediately are:
  • The Aleutians would be back in one district instead of two 
  • If the Amended Proclamation Plan is then approved as the final plan, there would be no need to make changes to any districts after the November 2012 election. There would be less disruption. 
Here are links to both the Amended Proclamation Plan and the Interim Plan. 

The Board's been pretty good about getting court documents posted so I expect the court order should be up soon. 

 Given there will be four days to meet the Division of Elections' May 14 deadline (which, could, theoretically be delayed by a court order), my guess is the Supreme Court would like to make a decision pretty quickly and right now the leading candidate would be the Court's choice of the Amended Proclamation Plan.  Unless there are really good arguments raised against that option.  And I have heard that various parties are working hard to get their briefs in by tomorrow' (May 8) deadline.

Here's part of the Order:


 


The parties involved will be the Redistricting Board and those who have been involved with the case in court already, plus anyone else who petitions the court in advance and gets approval.





"Each side" has an hour.  Is this the whole enchilada for both the interim and final plan in one hearing?  Or will there be another hearing later for the finalized Proclamation Plan?  Has the Supreme Court decided to try to squeeze both decisions together under this expedited schedule?  If so, it would seem to mean that they weren't excited about Judge McConahy's ruling sending the Plan back to the board to show that all districts were constitutional.  And what about his argument that the Board needed to rework Southeast Alaska?  Now it would appear it is up to the other parties to make their arguments about any districts they think are still unconstitutional.   It would also appear that this is a victory for Board attorney Michael White who argued against having to come up with justification for each district's constitutionality.  But, I'm not an attorney and I'm sure there is a lot here that I'm missing or misreading. 

What are the practical political implications on the elections in November?  My understanding is that both the Amended Proclamation Plan and the Interim plan would have similar consequences to a few sitting legislators.

  • Democratic Senator Joe Thomas would be in the same district as Republican Senator John Coghill.  (Fairbanks)

  • Democratic Senator Al Kookesh would be in the same district as Democratic [whoops, Republican] Senator Bert Stedman. (Southeast)

  • Anchorage Democratic Senator Bettye Davis would have half of her district shifted to Eagle River where it is said Rep. Anna Fairclough will oppose her for the Senate seat. (Anchorage)

  • Democratic Rep. David Guttenberg would be in the same district as Republican Rep. Alan Dick. (Fairbanks/Interior)

  • Democratic Anchorage Reps. Doogan and Tuck would have been in the same district, but Doogan has announced his retirement.   (Anchorage)

  • Southeast Republican Rep. Peggy Wilson would be in the same district as Rep. Kyle Johansen.

My sense is that the Republicans think they will win most of the contests and that Democrats aren't ceding any of these, though some will be harder to keep than others.