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Saturday
Oct162004
Saturday, October 16, 2004 at 05:03AM
Despite the distribution of more than $1.3 billion to 42
states to correct faulty voting machines and make other improvements
for next month's presidential election, approximately 75 percent of
voters will use the same machines they used four years ago, a
development that worries the chairman of the federal commission
overseeing balloting changes. "In one sense, by Washington standards,
we have moved rather quickly when we talk about the things we've done,"
says DeForest B. Soaries, Jr., chairman of the bi-partisan Election
Assistance Commission. "But [given] people's expectations -- and, more
importantly, the need to guarantee fair elections - I think we probably
have moved more slowly than need demands...I don't think enough of that
has happened this year." Soaries, a Black Republican, was appointed to
the post last year by President Bush. He says, "It's been a very
challenging start up. I'm proud of the things that we've accomplished
this year. But this year was ?04. And I think people's expectations
were that more things would happen since the last election was four
years ago." [more ]