computer voting

voting problems this past Tuesday

I would be interested in hearing about any voting problems that occured this past Tuesday. I saw articles about problems up in the Triangle concerning voters being given the wrong ballots, were these paper or machine ballots? Did this happen other places?

BTW - The person posting on here as "Gray" is not me.

Our Vote Will Not Be Intimidated, Suppressed, Purged, Folded, Spindled, or Otherwise Mutilated

NCDP Chair Jerry Meek announced today that state Democrats would participate in an unprecedented 50-state election protection program to prepare for the 2008 election.

North Carolina will participate in an in-depth nationwide survey to collect critical data on the often confusing and complex sets of administrative practices and decisions governing our nation’s elections. We will work with election officials throughout the state to help identify potential issues so they can be resolved well in advance of the 2008 election.

More specifically, we will work with local election officials to answer critical questions about voter registration, centralized voter databases, voting systems and absentee voting, provisional balloting, polling place procedures and Election Day preparation.

Data collected from the survey will be analyzed to determine the needs of each election locality and the next steps for strengthening the election process in that locality.

“North Carolina Democrats will not rest until every single eligible North Carolinian can register to vote, cast their ballot without fear of intimidation or harassment, and have confidence that their vote will be counted fairly and accurately,” said NCDP Chair Jerry Meek.

“Our commitment stands in stark contrast to what we’ve seen from Republicans both here in North Carolina and across the country,” Meek said. “From false reports of voter fraud and restrictive voter ID proposals to voter purging and voter intimidation tactics, Republicans want to place a variety of roadblocks that keep countless Americans from exercising their right to vote."

Unexplained Undervote in Mecklenburg County

In the November 2, 2006 election, Mecklenburg County, had several very close results in both national and state races, including a 329 vote squeaker in the Kissell-Hayes Congressional election. Scrutiny of the vote totals has revealed an unexplained undervote: a significantly higher percentage of voters than in the past declined to vote for the most prominent races such as those for US House of Representatives. Never in past years had the Congressional races been "outperformed" by downballot races such as for sheriff, county commissioner etc.... but it did happen in 2006. Mecklenburg County includes parts of three Congressional districts. ALL three districts had a significantly higher undervote in Mecklenburg than they did in other counties, and all three races had a significantly higher undervote than they did past years for the same race.

For a look at the data, analysis, and an account of the problems that arose during the recount, please read on...

NC 8 Recount for Kissell Hayes Contest? Deadlines and Details

The Kissell/Hayes contest for US Congress may end up in
a recount situation.

The New York Times says that if there is a recount, it would take place
November 20 or 21.

Volunteers to help out - anyone?

Here's the NY Times article:

"November 8, 2006 New York Times. Undecided Houses Races Roundup.

North Carolina’s 8th District: The final count of the extremely
close race in the south-central part of the state will determine
if Democrat Larry Kissell succeeded in his bid to defeat four-term
Republican Rep. Robin Hayes — which would be one of the year’s
biggest upsets — or fell just short. With all precincts reporting
in official returns, Hayes led Kissell by 456 votes out of more
than 120,000 counted, a margin of two-tenths of 1 percent...

Kissell, a social studies teacher, overcame huge disadvantages

I voted for Roger Sharpe!

Early voting started in North Carolina this past week and my wife and I wanted to take advantage of it. I am glad we did.

From what I understand from the BOE workers, local BOE databases were swapped over to a single state-wide database in Raleigh this past spring. That kind of database merger sweeps in all the problems you can possibly imagine. I was listed as inactive, even though they have me voting every two years since, like, forever. And my wife's data was also wonky - they still had her maiden name, we have been married for 13 years. The main problem stemmed, I think, from the 'geoloc' database. Our residence is on Brookstone Court - least that is what the street sign says. Nothing could be changed with our registration until we figured out Raleigh thought we lived on Brookstone DRIVE. Just that basic error locked up everything.

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