And Schumer's going to hold congressional hearings. If any of
these probes will dare to go
beyond the issue of monopoly per se, and tackle the suspicious
bias of ES&S's machines;
the easy hackability of their wares;the theocratic mission of the
company's founders and the
highly partisan complection of their managers, American democracy
may stand a chance.
MCM
Voting machine
maker faces federal hearings
Kanawha
commissioner also asks AG to investigate
By Paul J.
Nyden
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
-- The company that makes the electronic voting machines used in many
states, including West Virginia, will be the focus of congressional
hearings next month.
Fourteen states and the U.S. Department of Justice have opened
investigations into whether Election Systems & Software owns too
much of the voting machine market nationally.
On Sept. 1, Omaha, Neb.-based ES&S bought Diebold Inc.'s voting
machine business, giving ES&S 70 percent of the national
market.
States with their
own investigations into the growing ES&S monopoly are Alabama,
Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Maryland,
Massachusetts, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas and
Washington. Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., plans to hold the
congressional hearings.
"What will happen tomorrow and over the next few years to the
cost of maintaining and improving the machines, especially when the
company has almost a total monopoly?" asked Kanawha County
Commission President Kent Carper, a longtime critic of
ES&S.
ES&S officials did not return telephone messages last week.
During the 2008 elections, ES&S voting machines generated
controversies in several West Virginia counties, including Kanawha
County.
At the time, 14 voters from Berkeley, Greenbrier, Jackson, Monongalia,
Ohio and Putnam counties told The Charleston Gazette that ES&S
machines switched their votes from Democratic to Republican
candidates.
Carper and other public officials began questioning the accuracy of
ES&S voting machines. Critics also questioned the lack of any
paper trail of how voters cast their ballots.
In the 2008
elections, Kanawha County used "optical scan" voting
machines, where each voter filled out a paper ballot, then scanned the
ballot into a voting machine. Carper still prefers that method,
because all those paper ballots were saved.
But most West Virginia counties used electronic voting machines where
people cast votes by touching computer screens.
"I am not so much questioning the machines as the monopoly
control ES&S will have over election systems," Secretary of
State Natalie Tennant said last week.
"All our optical scans or electronic machines are purchased from
ES&S. I am the watchdog to make sure we put ES&S' feet to the
fire to make sure we get the service we deserve."
Diebold produces and operates a variety of electronic machines,
including ATMs, Tennant said. She said Diebold's elections division,
called Premier, was a small part of the company when it was sold to
ES&S earlier this year.
Last week, Carper said he is more confident in the electronic machines
today.
"We were originally very concerned about the touch screens. The
first machines used in West Virginia did not have a paper trail and
they were not properly tested. I am now more comfortable with the
touch-screen machines and we will use them for early voting in Kanawha
County.
"But I am still concerned that one vendor has a monopoly,"
Carper said. "Millions of dollars in taxpayer money has been
spent in West Virginia."
Last week, Carper sent a letter to Attorney General Darrell V.
McGraw requesting an "investigation into ES&S being awarded a
contract that created a monopoly and has held the State of West
Virginia as a hostage." McGraw has not yet responded.
Reach Paul J. Nyden at pjny...@wvgazette.com or
304-348-5164.