Republicans Apologize Over Mailer Sent Out Telling Republicans to Vote Absentee because Electronic Voting is Unreliable
- Originally published in the Orlando Sentinel (Florida) July 30, 2004 Copyright 2004 Sentinel Communications Co.
By Mark Hollis, Tallahassee Bureau
TALLAHASSEE
-- Embarrassed Republican Party officials apologized Thursday for
sending mixed signals about touch-screen voting equipment after the
discovery of a GOP campaign brochure that urged some Miami voters to
cast absentee ballots instead of using the electronic machines.
Democratic
Party officials and several civil-rights groups pounced on the flier as
either a laughable foul-up or a sign that Republican leaders also
question the reliability of the machines.
Gov.
Jeb Bush, Secretary of State Glenda Hood -- both Republicans -- and
many GOP legislators have been saying for weeks that the touch screens
are accurate and the state is ready to run a fair election.
"Have
no doubt that we are confident of Florida's elections system, and that
means the entire electoral system is accurate and secure," said Joseph
Agostini, spokesman for the Florida Republican Party. "We regret any
misunderstanding over this issue."
The
glossy mailer, paid for by the state GOP and featuring two pictures of
a smiling President Bush, tells Miami voters to use absentee ballots.
"The liberal Democrats have already begun their attacks, and the new electronic voting machines do not have a paper ballot
to verify your vote in case of a recount," the front page of the mailer
reads. "Make sure your vote counts, order your absentee ballot today."
Democrats
and advocacy groups have been pushing Bush and Hood to create a system
for manual recounts of touch-screen results. But Bush and Hood have
refused to do so.
"It stinks," said Sharon
Lettman-Pacheco of the People for the American Way Foundation. "The
damage is done. There is no time now to flip-flop. I don't care about
the apologies. They just need to put in place an audit trail to make
sure every vote gets counted."
The
Republican flier was sent to an unspecified number of voters in a state
House district in which two Republicans are facing off in a hotly
contested Aug. 31 primary.
The mailer was
distributed in Miami-Dade, one of 15 counties, including Lake and
Sumter, that switched from punch-card ballots to touch screens after
the 2000 presidential election debacle. Absentee ballots are filled out
on paper and tallied on optical scan machines after the ballot is
returned by mail.
The mailing first
surfaced this week at the Democratic National Convention in Boston,
prompting Democratic leaders from Florida to express outrage.
"It
wasn't only inappropriate, it was outrageous," said state Sen. Ron
Klein, D-Boca Raton, by telephone from Boston. "If the voting equipment
isn't a problem, then don't create political literature and issue
political statements which are designed to scare people or intimidate
them."
A Bush spokeswoman said the governor, who was on a trade mission in Canada on Thursday, has not seen the flier.
"He
does not agree with any message that is going to criticize the
touch-screen system because it works," said Jill Bratina, Bush's
communications director. "We had elections in 2002 on electronic
machines. . . . They work, and voters should be comfortable using them."
The
brochure came on top of the discovery this week that, in Miami-Dade
County, the electronic records of the Democratic governor's primary
between Janet Reno and Bill McBride had been largely lost because of
two 2003 computer crashes.