|
ACLU and Disability Law Center
Applaud Secretary Galvin’s Decision on New Voting Technology
|
|
|
March 15, 2007 |
| |
The American
Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts and the Disability
Law Center have again joined forces to applaud Secretary of
State William F. Galvin’s decision to approve the use in
Massachusetts elections of a ballot marking voting machine
that is both accessible and secure.
“Voting equipment that is both accessible and secure is
essential to ensuring the integrity of the entire elections
system in the Commonwealth,” said Carol Rose, Executive
Director of the ACLU of Massachusetts. “The Secretary’s
decision to fund an automatic ballot marking system best
ensures that Massachusetts voters with disabilities – and
thus all voters – are guaranteed equal access to a secure
ballot.”
Stanley J. Eichner, Executive Director of the Disability Law
Center, also welcomed the Secretary’s decision. “The
automatic ballot marking device has consistently received
the highest overall ratings from the disability community,”
he said. “Providing secure voting machines for voters with
disabilities is part and parcel of protecting their rights
to equal access to the ballot and to having their votes
reliably counted.”
In January, the ACLU of Massachusetts
and the Disability Law Center urged the Secretary to fund
the ballot marking machines and to avoid purchasing direct
electronic recording (DRE) systems. Although both types of
voting technology had been certified for use in
Massachusetts, only one technology is to receive state
funding under the federal Help America Vote Act of 2002.
From an accessibility perspective, the automatic ballot
marking device permits disabled voters to use Braille, jelly
buttons, a puff-sip interface and audio technology to mark a
paper ballot, which can be counted by optical scan or by
hand. In contrast, the direct-recording electronic (DRE)
voting machines both mark and count votes, and are
considered by many voting security experts to be prone to
error and vulnerable to tampering.
“DREs are susceptible to both intentional system-wide
tampering and accidental ‘bugs,’ since a single programmer
at a DRE manufacturer could conceivably change the code in
many or all of the DRE products without detection,” said
Rose. “DREs also carry the danger of statistical
tampering—changing the software to miscount an undetectable,
but significant, number of votes in favor of, or against,
one party or candidate or issue.”
“The decision by the Secretary shows that it is both
possible and essential to build common ground between the
disability rights community and the growing number of
citizens who are concerned that many of the proposed new
technologies are subject to tampering and error,” said
Eichner. “We must debunk the myth that we have to choose
between accessible voting and verifiable voting. Democracy
requires that we have both.” |