New rule set on Florida touch-screen recounts; No Option of Paper Ballot
Saturday, October 16, 2004 at 05:10AM
TheSpook
New rule set on Florida touch-screen recounts; voter rejections fought - No Option of Paper Ballot
The state set a new rule for recounting touch-screen ballots Friday -
just 18 days before the presidential election. The move angered voter
rights groups that had sought to help shape the language. In other
Friday actions affecting Florida voting, a Miami judge urged a quick
trial on a lawsuit challenging the rejections of more than 10,000 voter
registration cards, and Palm Beach County officials completed a
critical test of their touch-screen system after a computer crash
delayed it by several days. Secretary of State Glenda Hood's office
released the new recount rules late in the day. If the Nov. 2 election
is as close as the 2000 contest between President Bush and Democrat Al
Gore, county elections supervisors will be told to review each
electronic ballot image to see if the number of so-called undervotes,
those on which no candidate was chosen, matches the undervote totals
given by the machine. If the numbers don't match up, the machines will
be checked for problems. If that doesn't solve the discrepancy, the
elections officials are told to trust that the original machine count
was accurate. The new rule is a far cry from what a coalition of voter
activists were seeking. They wanted voters in the 15 counties that use
touch-screen voting machines to have the option of using a paper
ballot. They also wanted to create a process to make sure all votes
cast match the number of people who voted and have a federal court
oversee a recount if one were necessary. [more ] and [more ]