Why voting by mail will be so hard for states to set up on the fly

"Pure politics Some Republicans — from a Georgia state lawmaker to the president of the United States — have outright said it: If you mail every registered voter a ballot, you expand the voting pool beyond those who would go to a polling place….

Wow. GA House Speaker David Ralston comes right out and says he doesn’t want every voter to receive an absentee ballot application because it would hurt Republicans
https://t.co/4B3s8BQAQI pic.twitter.com/mAuGqC4p1m
— David Nir (@DavidNir) April 2, 2020

“The things they had in there were crazy,” President Trump said this week on Fox and Friends of Democrats’ proposals for the coronavirus relief package. “They had things — levels of voting that, if you ever agreed to it, you’d never have a Republican elected in this country again.””

You Shouldn’t Have to Risk Your Life to Vote

New York Times: You Shouldn’t Have to Risk Your Life to Vote

“... In their zeal to ram through this vote, Republicans are subjecting Wisconsinites to the worst of both worlds: a turnout that will be sharply reduced because so many voters will continue to do the right thing and abide by the stay-at-home order, and yet one that will still be large enough to inundate the few precincts that will be open, and expose untold numbers of people to potential infection. 

Turnout is likely to be especially lower in Democratic-leaning cities like Milwaukee, which holds a large majority of the state’s minority voters and which has been hit hardest by the pandemic.

Wisconsin Republicans aren’t outliers in their attempts to make voting harder. Republicans across the country have known for years that they win when fewer people vote.”

Hack the vote: terrifying film shows how vulnerable US elections are

HBO’s Kill Chain: The Cyber War on America’s Elections

Watch this important documentary now, free for the month of April.

https://www.hbo.com/documentaries/kill-chain-the-cyber-war-on-americas-elections

In advance of the 2020 Presidential Election, Kill Chain: The Cyber War on America’s Elections takes a deep dive into the weaknesses of today’s election technology, an issue that is little understood by the public or even lawmakers.

Trump says election proposals in coronavirus stimulus bill would hurt Republican chances

"The President says that if we make it easier to vote, Republicans will lose elections,” Lofgren said in a statement. “He is apparently willing to expose voters to the deadly COVID-19 for purely partisan political advantage.”..Ellen Kurz, the founder and CEO of iVote, a political action committee, told The Hill that Trump’s "sentiments bring into stark relief why Republican officials across the country have taken every opportunity to keep people from voting.”

Voting by Mail Would Reduce Coronavirus Transmission but It Has Other Risks

New York will allow voters to check “sickness” as a reason to request an absentee ballot this year.  Gov Cuomo is being pressed by some groups to go to a vote-by-mail system this year for everyone, which would entail ballots being mailed to all registered voters.  There are huge problems for either response. 

“….There is bipartisan consensus that mail-in ballots are the form of voting most vulnerable to fraud. A 2005 commission led by President Jimmy Carter and James A. Baker III — George W. Bush’s secretary of state — concluded that these ballots “remain the largest source of potential voter fraud.” Ballot harvesting scandals, in which political operatives tamper with absentee ballots that voters have entrusted to them, have marred recent elections in North Carolina and Texas.

...In some cities with diverse populations, hundreds of types of ballots in multiple languages must be designed and directed to the appropriate voters in the correct precincts. Envelopes must be thick enough to protect voter privacy, and the paper thickness must be appropriate for scanners used to count ballots. When ballots are received, machines often open the envelopes and sort and tabulate the votes. These machines are expensive, and they generally take several months to order.

...Rodriguez said requests for absentee ballots have already skyrocketed, with more than 15,000 applications awaiting approval. Workers must open each emailed request, verify the voter’s identity and then manually enter the information before any absentee ballot can be generated. ...“It’s a serious struggle,” she said, adding that there have been supply shortages for paper and envelopes across the state. “All of the normal suppliers we have are completely out of stock.”

The 2020 Election Won’t Look Like Any We’ve Seen Before

New York Times: "The most practical fix is to make voting by mail a clear and free option for every eligible voter in the country. This means, at a minimum: printing tens of millions of mail-in ballots and envelopes; ensuring that all registered voters receive one automatically, can request a replacement if they don’t, and can return it by Election Day; and finally, having the human and technological resources, like ballot scanners, available to count those votes quickly and accurately."

PEW: "U.S. elections have been in flux since the outbreak of the novel coronavirus. Connecticut, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland and Ohio all delayed their Democratic primaries. New York officials also are considering delaying that state’s April 28 primary….Election officials in states with restrictive absentee requirements are looking for ways to allow as many voters as possible to use absentee ballots, a safer alternative to in-person voting in a global pandemic. If this crisis continues into November, however, some experts warn that a pivot to voting by mail could strain state resources and disenfranchise certain voters if not handled properly.”

The Cybersecurity 202: Democrats see coronavirus stimulus as last, best chance for vote-by-mail push

The to-do list includes machinery to print huge numbers of paper ballots, high-speed scanners to count filled-out ballots and a totally revamped security system to ensure no one tampers with the ballots between people’s homes and election offices. In some cases, states that don’t offer no-excuse mail in voting would also have to change their constitutions to do so, Amy and Isaac report.

Voting Rights Roundup: These states could delay primaries and change how to vote amid coronavirus

Gov Cuomo is being urged to establish vote by mail on an emergency basis for New York State. This has implications for the security of the election system if not done with attention to guidelines such as recommended by the Brennan Center for Justice. https://www.brennancenter.org/sites/default/files/2020-03/Coronavirus Response Memo.pdf

The Brennan Center recommends:

Requesting, receiving, and returning mail ballots

Options for requesting, receiving, and returning mail-in ballots should be expanded, while maintaining the security of the voting system.

States should offer multiple methods of requesting mail-in ballots, including online, in person, by phone, and by mail.

Secure options for returning ballots should be expanded.

  • States should offer voters drop boxes in accessible locations, if they are able to do so securely. Outside of government offices, drop boxes should be equipped with secure cameras.

  • Voters should also be offered secure curbside drop-off options at polling places.

  • States should allow voters who are unable to leave their homes to designate individuals to return their completed ballots.

No Stimulus Without Election Protection

"Come November, people may still not be able to gather safely at polling places, and election workers — many of them elderly — may not be able to interact safely with hundreds of people. That’s terribly worrisome. As Seth Masket of the University of Denver has pointed out, elections are an essential institution in a democracy, much as grocery stores are...Fighting coronavirus will take war-like mobilization of govt resources. But even during the Civil War & WWII, we still held elections. It’s essential that Congress mandate & provide funding for every state to adopt universal vote-by-mail so we don’t have a political crisis too..”

Pandemic Planning Should Ensure All Votes Can Be Cast by Mail in November, Experts Say

Senator Wyden and Klobuchar’s bill includes $500 million in federal funding to cover the cost of providing prepaid envelopes to voters and for states to purchase high-speed scanners to quickly count tens of millions of absentee ballots.
 
A provision would also bar any of the money from being used for internet-based voting, which experts say is insecure and Wyden argues would aid further Russian interference in the election.

While Wyden is a proponent of having votes cast entirely by mail, or dropped off in locked collection bins close to election day, … Hasan favors “in-person absentee balloting because it’s more secure,”  

… In a Washington Post opinion article, Marc Elias argued that “all votes postmarked by Election Day must be treated as timely and counted in full.” …… Hasen argues that in-person early voting should be part of the package.
 
“I tend to favor in-person absentee balloting because it’s more secure,” Hasen said. “When you have ballots floating around out there, there’s the potential for ballot-tampering — as we saw in the North Carolina 9th Congressional district race in 2018, where you had political operatives taking ballots and potentially destroying them or changing them.”

……………………………………………………………………………………………...

https://theintercept.com/2020/03/16/pandemic-planning-ensure-votes-can-cast-mail-november-experts-say/
Pandemic Planning Should Ensure All Votes Can Be Cast by Mail in November, Experts Say
Robert Mackey
March 16 2020, 9:30 p.m.

AS OHIO’S GOVERNOR defied a court ruling and ordered that his state’s primary be delayed until June, citing the need for social distancing in response to the coronavirus pandemic, Senate Democrats and election experts pressed Congress to act immediately on legislation to ensure that voters in all 50 states will be able to cast ballots by mail or vote early in the general election if the public health emergency lasts into November.

That is particularly urgent because, as Marc Elias, a lawyer who represents the Democratic Party on voting rights issues, explains, while states can set their own primary days, “the federal general election is set by federal statute as the the Tuesday following the first Monday in November. This date cannot be changed by a state nor by the President.”

Democratic senators Ron Wyden, of Oregon, and Amy Klobuchar, of Minnesota, introduced legislation on Monday that would require all states to offer an option for voters to mail in or drop off hand-marked paper ballots if 25 percent of the states have declared a state of emergency related to an infectious disease, like Covid-19, or a natural disaster.

“The pandemic could hit like a tsunami,” Wyden told The Intercept by phone from his home in Portland. “How can we tell people, particularly elderly veterans, that they have to choose between their health and their vote?”

Ron Wyden

@RonWyden
Since he’s taking advantage of #VoteByMail himself, I hope Donald Trump would commit to signing my bill into law to help states implement vote by mail through November to keep every American safe. https://twitter.com/pbpost/status/1237854320617349123 …
The Palm Beach Post

@pbpost
President Trump requests absentee ballot https://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/20200311/president-trump-requests-absentee-ballot?rssfeed=true&utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=Social&utm_campaign=ghf-palmbeach-main …


Even if the spread of Covid-19 slows in the coming months, previous pandemics, like the global outbreak of influenza that killed about 50 million people in 1918 and 1919, have struck in waves. As a CDC timeline for that pandemic’s impact on the United Kingdom shows, it struck first in the summer of 1918, and then receded, only to return with increased virulence in October and November.

A timeline of the influenza pandemic of 1918-1919 in the United Kingdom, from a CDC study.

If enacted, the new law would force 16 states that still have restrictions on who can request an absentee ballot to remove them. Wyden’s home state of Oregon has conducted general elections entirely by mail since 2000, when turnout spiked to 79 percent.

“In about two-thirds of the states, there already is no-excuse absentee balloting,” election-law expert Rick Hasen pointed out in a Skype interview on Monday. Hasen, a professor of law and political science at the University of California, Irvine, and the author of the new book, “Election Meltdown,” noted that expanding such voting to the whole country would cost money and likely delay the counting of votes well beyond election night.

Ron Wyden

@RonWyden
In-person elections are going to be harder and harder to run during a pandemic when social isolation and quarantines are in place. The #VoteByMail system pioneered by Oregon is our best option for keeping our democracy running during this crisis. https://twitter.com/BaltSunBrk/status/1237799948298616833 …


“Absentee ballots take time to be processed because you have to check signatures,” Hasen said. “We’re going to need more federal funding because you’re going to need scanners, you’re going to need employees checking these ballots. It should be one of the things that is thought about as part of the package of coronavirus-related legislation.”

Wyden and Klobuchar’s bill includes $500 million in federal funding to cover the cost of providing prepaid envelopes to voters and to for states to purchase high-speed scanners to quickly count tens of millions of absentee ballots.

A provision would also bar any of the money from being used for internet-based voting, which experts say is insecure and Wyden argues would aid further Russian interference in the election. The senator noted that the nation’s top voting machine maker, Election Systems and Software, had already admitted to him in 2018 that it lied about securing its machines from hacking by making sure that they were never connected to the internet.

While Wyden is a proponent of having votes cast entirely by mail, or dropped off in locked collection bins close to election day, the system Oregon has operated for years, Hasen argues that in-person early voting should be part of the package.

“I tend to favor in-person absentee balloting because it’s more secure,” Hasen said. “When you have ballots floating around out there, there’s the potential for ballot-tampering — as we saw in the North Carolina 9th Congressional district race in 2018, where you had political operatives taking ballots and potentially destroying them or changing them.”

“We need to have safeguards about that,” Hasen added, “but we need also to make sure that we need to have procedures in place for people who don’t have easy access to the mail, like people who live on Indian reservations, to make sure their ballots can be distributed and collected. It’s complicated and so now is the time to be planning for November. We can’t wait until September or October to try to roll something out.

In a Washington Post opinion article, Marc Elias argued that “all votes postmarked by Election Day must be treated as timely and counted in full.” If the pandemic forces nationwide voting by mail, Elias wrote, postal facilities, already dealing with the impact of Covid-19 on their own workforces, will have to handle millions of ballots. That will likely mean delays in mail delivery times, which should not disqualify votes cast by election day.

Hasen also echoes Wyden’s concern about proposals for internet voting. “I think the consensus among computer scientists is that internet-based voting is a bad idea: it’s not secure,” Hasen said. “And beyond the question of the actual security, there’s the question of public confidence in the process,” he added. “When you don’t have a piece of paper that can be checked, I think people are concerned that there could be hacking somehow changing the votes. You even see it now when we don’t have internet-based voting, that people are concerned about voting machines. This is why I suggest that we always need a paper trail, something that can be counted in the event that there is a concern.”

“Internet voting is not ready for prime time,” Hasen said. “It’s hard to think of a worse idea than internet voting to roll out for the first time in what might be the most contentious presidential race of our lifetimes.”

Absentee ballots, by contrast, are hand-marked on paper “and can be recounted by hand if necessary,” Hasen said. “People voting with an absentee ballot, its on a piece of paper, they’ve hand-marked it, which I think of as the gold standard.

Hasen generally favors Wyden’s proposed legislation, but argues that it needs to include protections for voters. “For example, the ability of voters to get notice if their ballot is rejected because signatures don’t match, so they have a chance to cure that,” he said.

“I want to see limits on the ability to collect absentee ballots from strangers, which is something that I know some Democrats oppose, but I think it’s important as a security measure and as a confidence measure,” he added. “I think there would need to be some exceptions in there for places where you have large rural areas without good mail service, but generally speaking I would favor some limits — like in Colorado, where a person can collect up to 10 absentee ballots and return them, which seems reasonable.”

Coronavirus and 2020 Elections: What Happens to Voting in an Outbreak

Concerns are rising about the impact of coronavirus on elections, but New York can eliminate one source of contagion to reduce the risk:

BAN TOUCHSCREEN VOTING MACHINES IN NEW YORK A8597 (Paulin)/ S6733 (Myrie)

Sign the Common Cause New York petition to oppose the Certification of the Broken ExpressVote XL Voting System!

https://actionnetwork.org/petitions/oppose-the-certification-of-the-broken-expressvote-xl-voting-system

https://citizensvotingny.org/take-action

NYTimes: Coronavirus and 2020 Elections: What Happens to Voting in an Outbreak "Edmund Michalowski, the deputy clerk for elections in Cook County, Ill.,..added that officials have also been looking at effective disinfectants to wipe down touch screens between each vote.”

Touchscreens: The Mosquito of the Digital Age "The widespread and rapidly growing automation and digitization of our world has led to the installation of billions of touchscreens, both in our personal possession and in public use, such as at hospitals, airports, schools, restaurants, public transit, banks and government offices."

Germs at the Airport "According to our research, the average self check-in screen contained 253,857 CFU – over 13 times more than the average CFU of an airport water fountain button. One check-in screen recorded over 1 million CFU. In comparison, an average of only 172 CFU are found on toilet seats."

The fight to vote: Super Tuesday California and Texas voters faced hours-long lines on Super Tuesday

Creating long lines has long been an effective form of voter suppression. The Republicans use it to their advantage. Democratic primary contests are also impacted, with students or other groups targeted in order to shore up favored candidates at the expense of others. Sophisticated outside interests, such as Russia, also have an interest in creating chaos and discord, as well as influencing outcomes. What will it take to reclaim our elections?

Lawmakers Are Warned That Russia Is Meddling to Re-elect Trump

Trump shot the messenger yet again, firing a senior US intelligence official for releasing a report saying that Russia is interfering in elections to help Trump.

Meanwhile, Brad Friedman writes “... there are reasons to be concerned about the integrity of several upcoming primary elections, not to mention this November's critical general election. Saturday's crucial South Carolina primary will require all state voters to use brand-new, 100% unverifiable touchscreens made by a company with a long history of election failures. The March 3rd Super Tuesday primary, just three days later, will see voters in California, Texas, and North Carolina, among other states, forced to use new, similarly unverifiable touchscreen voting systems for the first time.”

“A Complete disaster’: Fears grow over potential Nevada caucus malfunction

New York has big problems of its own. Aside from the vulnerability of e-pollbooks, there is the possibility of certification of the ESS Expressvote XL in time for adoption of this new hackable technology to be used in New York in November.

The Iowa disaster makes it clear that we should stick to doing things the old fashioned way

Washington Post: Editorials: The Iowa disaster makes it clear that we should stick to doing things the old fashioned way | The Washington Post
It's 2020. Should Americans really still be voting with pen and paper? The answer, amplified by this week’s meltdown in Iowa, is a resounding “yes.”

Editorials: Iowa’s message for the other states: Be ready for everything to go wrong | Lawrence Norden/The Washington Post

State senator calls for public hearing on new voting machines

"Members of the good-government organization Common Cause New York have been raising alarms about the technology for months, arguing that certifying the machines would "risk jeopardizing [New York] elections.”  “The ExpressVote XL is a hackable voting machine that, if certified, will compromise the safety and security of our elections," said Sarah Goff, the deputy director of Common Cause NY. "We’re glad to see the Legislature commit to public hearings. Next, the NYSBOE must reject the machine.””

The Only Safe Election Is a Low-Tech Election

Kevin Roose: "After Monday’s Iowa caucus debacle, I’ve decided that Americans should vote by etching our preferred candidate’s name into a stone tablet with a hammer and chisel. "Or maybe by dropping pebbles into a series of urns, as the ancient Greeks did. ".. every piece of technology involved in the voting process is a possible point of failure….Using a proprietary app to report vote totals is the kind of thing that sounds simple on a start-up’s whiteboard but utterly falls apart in a chaotic real-world environment, where connections drop, phones malfunction and poorly tested apps strain under a surge of traffic. Add an army of frenzied poll workers, impatient voters and twitchy news media, and you might as well have asked the caucus workers to whip up their own JavaScript.”

Fwd: Cyber attacks and electronic voting errors threaten 2020 outcome experts warn

"Potential electronic voting equipment failures and cyber attacks from Russia and other countries pose persistent threats to the 2020 elections, election security analysts and key Democrats warn....“Sen. Warner’s concerns were underscored in November when seven top agency officials, including the heads of the FBI and CIA, issued a joint statement predicting Russia, and other countries intend to meddle in the 2020 elections via cyber attacks or social media. ...Russia, China, Iran, and other foreign malicious actors all will seek to interfere in the voting process or influence voter perceptions,” the joint statement said....A Senate intelligence committee report in mid-2019 concluded that Kremlin hackers manipulated election systems in all 50 states, and succeeded in breaching systems in two Florida counties and another state
“...the recent Brennan report cited growing usage of e-poll books as one of several potential trouble spots for the 2020 elections, and suggested that more advance planning is warranted to ensure safe elections in November. The study estimates 41 states will be using e-poll books next November.

Hackers Are Coming for the 2020 Election - and We're Not Ready

"Four years ago, for an embarrassingly modest price,...  Russian-based hackers tested election websites in all 50 states for weak spots, like burglars casing a would-be target. “The Russians were testing whether our windows were open, rattling our doors to see whether they were locked, and found the windows and doors wide open,” says Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), the top Democrat on the Intelligence Committee. ...
“...Are we prepared going into the 2020 election?... To use Sen. Warner’s analogy, the windows and doors are no longer wide open, but the burglars are more sophisticated, and there are a lot more of them than there were four years ago. "Four years later, the Russians are more crafty than ever. According to recent reports, they’re now using encrypted communications and recently hacked the Ukrainian natural-gas company at the center of the Trump impeachment scandal to potentially find damaging material about the Biden family. Other foreign nations, including Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, and China, are getting in on the act. They’ll be joined, analysts say, by domestic actors — American consultants and candidates and click merchants borrowing and adapting Russia’s tactics to influence an election or make a quick buck.""Nearly every expert agrees on this: The worst-case scenario, the one we need to prepare for, is a situation that causes Americans to question the bedrock of our democracy — free and fair elections. If such a catastrophe occurred and the integrity of a national election came into doubt, Michael Daniel, the former cybersecurity coordinator in the Obama White House who now runs the Cyber Threat Alliance, isn’t sure the country would ever be the same. “How do we deal with that?” he asks. “How do we recover from that?”

Cybersecurity 202: Voting machines vulnerable to hacking

These voting machines are coming to New York unless we act. 

Contact the governor :

https://www.governor.ny.gov/content/governor-contact-form

Dear Governor Cuomo:  Do not approve any BMD voting machines for New York.  They are vulnerable to hacking.  Stay with our current system of hand marked paper ballots for those who are able, with separate scanners to protect our vote count.