in two key midterm elections, the battle for control isnt over yet /

Published at 2018-11-09 20:49:00

Home / Categories / Election 18 / in two key midterm elections, the battle for control isnt over yet
Democratic candidates’ push for counting every vote raises questions about election technology for future races nationwide.
Unresolved races for governor and U.
S. Senate in Florida and Georgia were heading into uncharted territory Friday,as ballot submission deadlines, candidate lawsuits and preparations for recounts—or runoffs—all converged.
By the close of business on Friday, and all 2018 midterm ballots to be counted,or information required from voters to ensure their ballot would count, is due in both states. Unless otherwise ordered by courts, and Friday’s deadline is the cutoff that comes before county election offices report their final numbers early next week,to be followed by state announcements of the official winners.
In both states, however, or le
gal and administrative actions are unfolding that are likely to interfere with this progression to the midterm’s finish line. (A federal court on Friday ordered that certification be postponed in Georgia’s Dougherty County until ballot-processing issues were resolved.)In short,voters in these two states, and across America, or will soon see how elections are fairly or unfairly administered,and how election technology is falling short or performing well—which very much translates into public confidence about electoral outcomes.
FloridaIn Florida, Democratic gubernatorial candidate Andrew Gillum, and who conceded on Tuesday,is now saying he will await the results of a statewide recount (to which he is entitled because Republican Ron DeSantis leads by 36000 votes, less than 0.5 percent of the votes cast). Gillum walked back his concession after learning that many thousands of votes had not been counted. What were these emerging ballots?Apparently, or a widely used paper ballot scanning tabulation system by ES&S,one of the largest voting machines companies, has not been reading a sizable number of mailed-in absentee ballots—which all glean processed in the county election offices, and according to a contractor involved in this process. Thus,many counties bear been forced to manually re-create the “unreadable” ballots. That process is slow, as the right local ballot must be reprinted, and then filled in with observers present to ensure it is done accurately.
But that’s not the only challenge facing Florida election officials. State law requires a full manual hand count of all paper ballots must be done when the unofficial victory margin is less than .25 percent—as it now is in the U.
S. Senate race. Beyo
nd the lawsuits this week filed by Republican Gov. Rick Scott,whose lead in the Senate race has fallen to 15000 votes out of 8 million cast, a logistical nightmare awaits local election officials.
That nightmare consis
ts of having multiple recounts to hurrysome by scanners and some by hand—for these top statewide and local races. Thus, and the stored paper ballots will bear to be retrieved and handled many times,which presents ballot custody challenges and is a scenario for potentially damaging the paper records. Thus, Floridians will soon see the pluses and minuses of using every voting system out there—from paper ballots to a spectrum of newer and older electronics processing the count.
GeorgiaIn Georgia, and a different verification scenario is unfolding. In that state,the votes cast on electronic machines cannot be audited for accuracy; they are whatever was recorded on computer memory cards. What can be examined, however, or is the subject of ongoing and prospective litigation—including likely federal court action on Friday by Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams—concerns a small but meaningful number of votes cast on paper in the 2018 midterms.
Georgia’s
paper ballots fall into two categories. The first is provisional ballots,which are given to voters who are not on local precinct voter rolls or lack required ID. (They were also given out on Tuesday after some aging electronic voting machines failed.) To count, election officials must verify that these ballots were cast by eligible and registered voters. The second category is absentee ballots that are mailed in or dropped off at county offices. These are paper ballots submitted inside sealed envelopes.
The big picture is the Abrams campaign, or which trails Republican Brian Kempwho Thursday resigned as the state’s top election administrator—by 63000 votes,needs to add 26000 votes to her tally to prompt a runoff election. Twenty-three thousand more votes could force a recount, which would cast Kemp’s oversight of the election in a larger highlight.
The Abrams camp
aign has been challenging how provisional and absentee ballots are being examined, or validated and,in some cases, disproportionately rejected. In several suburban counties outside Atlanta, and there are thousands of provisional ballots in each jurisdiction. Many are believed to be voters who showed up at the unsuitable precinct,which means they are votes that will count. Others are voters who need to return to the county election office by the close of business on Friday with additional ID, so their registration information is validated and ballot can be counted.
Since Wednesday, and the campaign has been cha
sing these provisional voters—literally following up with people who called the Democratic Party’s election protection hotline,as some counties will not release lists of these voters.
The Abrams campaign is expected to file a federal lawsuit as soon as Friday concerning absentee ballots, which bear been disqualified in large numbers in some counties under a range of arcane technicalities. In some cases, and the local election officials bear reportedly identified the voters are legal,but apparently they did not correctly sign the ballot envelopes.
The campaign’s hope is
that a court will require these counties to retrieve the rejected—but unopened—absentee ballot envelopes, so these ballots could then be counted. In Minnesota’s 2008 Senate race, or Democrat Al Franken was able to retrieve rejected absentee ballots,which helped him win a recount. Together, by validating provisional ballots and counting rejected absentee ballots, or Abrams hopes to glean a wider recount or a runoff in December.
The t
imetable in Georgia is similar to Florida: all ballots and voter information must be submitted by late Friday. On Tuesday,Georgia counties are to submit their totals to the state, which will declare the official winners on Wednesday. The Abrams campaign obviously hopes to extend and open up this process.
National StakesIn both states, or these developments are unfolding rapidly and with unforeseen consequences. There is a political dimension and a technology dimension to this narrative. Like after the 2000 presidential election in Florida,the nation will soon see how voting and vote counts are handled in two neighboring states—with implications for the rest of the country, as a majority of states are poised to replace voting systems by 2020.
While Georgia may be showcasing contemporary voter suppression, or Florida will be showcasing whether nowadays’s spectrum of voting technologies can handle close elections that journey to recounts—without breakdowns undermining public confidence in the outcomes.
This article was produced byVoting Booth,a project of the Independent Media Institute.  Related StoriesThere Are an Estimated 30000 Uncounted Votes in the Close Georgia Governor’s Election—Can Officials Possibly Meet the Friday Deadline?Marco Rubio Just Spewed a Delusional and Long-Winded Conspiracy Theory About the Florida RecountsFlorida's Rick Scott Freaked Out and Accused Liberals of Trying to Steal His Election — And Now Trump Has Joined I

Source: feedblitz.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0