Ralph Nader Challenges Kerry and Edwards on Ohio Election:
Fulfill Your Promise to Make Every Vote Count!
By www.votenader.org
November 9, 2004
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Washington, DC: Ralph Nader issued a challenge today to John Kerry and
John Edwards to follow through on their post-election promise to the
American people to make sure every vote counts, starting in Ohio. In his
own introductory remarks to John Kerry's concession statement, John Edwards
said, "In America it is vital that every vote count, and that every vote
be counted."
According to a November 5th article by the Associated Press, elections
officials admitted that an error with an electronic voting system gave
President Bush 3,893 extra votes in a Gahanna precinct. Franklin County
reported Bush with 4,258 votes and John Kerry with 260 - a suspicious
count since only 638 voters cast ballots in that precinct. Election
officials in that county now say a cartridge from a voting machine
generated errors after the precinct closed - and only 365 people voted
for Bush. Additional machine errors in Ohio reported by VotersUnite.org,
include:
- Mahoning County. The glass on top of one electronic screen was too far
from the screen, making it difficult for people to use their fingers to
cast ballots. A screen went blank on a Youngstown voter while he cast
his ballot
- Mahoning County. 20 to 30 machines that needed to be recalibrated
during the voting process because some votes for a candidate were being
counted for that candidate's opponent
- Mahoning County. About a dozen machines needed to be reset because
they essentially froze
- Cincinnati. Problems with punch card voting machines delayed the start
of voting for up to an hour Tuesday morning at a suburban precinct.
Voters were unable to slide their punch-card ballots all the way into
any of the six voting machines that had ALL evidently been damaged in
transit.
- Columbus. Overcharged batteries on Danaher Controls
ELECTronic 1242 systems kept machines from booting up properly at the
beginning of the day
The resulting delays, combined with higher voter turnout, resulted in
lines of several hours—in one case, 22 hours!—led to some citizens'
voting rights being taken away by administrative default.
The situation in Ohio and other states bears out what Nader warned
against before the election. Computers are inherently subject to
programming error, equipment malfunction, and malicious tampering.
Paperless electronic voting machines make it impossible to safeguard the
integrity of our vote thereby threatening the very foundation of our
democracy.
However, the Democratic National Committee has remained silent on the
issue since Election Day. Neither the DNC web site nor the Ohio
Democratic Party site offered any response or any advice to voters on
where to turn.
"With the extensive pre-election effort to prevent election fraud,
including international observers, activist poll watchers and attempts
to enforce paper trail backups, the Democratic Party's silence on Ohio
is puzzling," said Ralph Nader.
Regardless of whether it changes the outcome, the Democrats should
follow through on their promise to make sure every vote counts in Ohio
and other states discovering similar problems with electronic voting
machines and other irregularities.
"It is imperative to find out whether changes are needed in the
equipment," he said. "At a minimum, the Democrats should put the state
on alert to clean up its act."
Other trouble spots exist in Ohio, including rules that allow officials
to reject some of the 155,000 provisional ballots being cast in that
state. Before Election Day, Ohio Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell
(a Republican who co-chairs President Bushs statewide campaign) was
challenged by voters-rights organizations for denying citizens their
voting rights on the basis of a rule (later rescinded) requiring voter
registration forms be printed on 80 pound paper stock. Voter
registration forms were submitted on newsprint in Cuyahoga County after
being printed in the (Cleveland) Plain Dealer. Blackwell is also accused
of trying to suppress the registration of poor and minority voters who
most often vote Democrat.
Nader says major electoral reforms are needed to ensure that every vote
count—that all voters are represented through electoral reforms like
instant run-off voting, none-of-the-above options, and proportional
representation; that non-major party candidates have a chance to run for
office and participate in debates; and that elections are publicly financed.
Ralph Nader calls upon John Edwards and John Kerry to be serious about
their post-election promise: "Our offices are being flooded with faxes
and e-mails asking for assistance in resolving these irregularities - a
lot of them are citizens who voted for you. You must now take action
to give our nation the fair accounting it deserves from the 2004
election and to protect democratic processes in future elections.
Although your party extended considerable funds and manpower to drive us
off the Ohio ballot, in the spirit of good government, I urge you to
make this effort now."