Maryland Governor Wants Paper Ballots 433
supabeast! writes, "Fed up with all the problems in the state's electronic voting system, Maryland Governor Robert Erlich wants the state to scrap the entire system and return to paper ballots. He's threatened to call a special session of the legislature to change the law to allow paper ballots. What makes this particularly interesting is that Erlich is a Republican — the party often maligned for exploiting flaws in electronic systems — and his attempts to clean up Maryland's voting problems are being opposed by Democrats, the party that is usually complaining about electronic voting!"
Partisanship (Score:2, Insightful)
Why the reversal? (Score:5, Insightful)
The way politics works these days is as follows:
In the red states, the Republican party is crooked as hell.
In the blue states, the Democratic party is crooked as hell.
Surprised? (Score:5, Insightful)
And for those of you voting for your "team" regardless of the actual issues and goals are doing the country just as large a disservice.
Retards... they're all retards (Score:3, Insightful)
I can't see how anyone could argue this point (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't care (Score:5, Insightful)
Bias (Score:5, Insightful)
Thanks for showing your bias submitter. The story stood up on its own without you injecting partisan hackery into the summary. Enjoy the ensuing flamewar
It's easier... (Score:2, Insightful)
It's easier to make accusations of cheating when you lose instead of accepting responsibility. This is one of the reasons I hate politicians so much. "Oh, we lost... So the other guys MUST be cheating!" Go home to your mommies.
Re:Surprised? (Score:5, Insightful)
I believe that the real debate in Washington is how best to distract citizens from the real issues facing our country and the world. The polarization of the parties is simply a ploy to get americans to react on an emotional level instead of examining issues from a logical perspective.
Re:Why the reversal? (Score:5, Insightful)
The losing party thinks election results are being modified by the winning party.
The winning party thinks the election results are just fine.
I never understood why people were so silly around here to think that the Republicans are the only dirty party? As far as I'm concerned, Al Gore is just mad that George Bush was able to 'modify' more votes than he could.
Re:Partisanship (Score:3, Insightful)
i think the original poster was referring to the democratic party's 'machine' style politics of the 20's-40's. intimidation, registering dead people, graft, ballot stuffing... all that stuff. wikipedia has an acceptable article on the chicago democratic machine here [wikipedia.org].
of course, that was 60 or 70 years ago and the shenanigans of the democratic party did not rely on the ballots being paper. but i think that was the original point.
Re:Bias (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Partisanship (Score:3, Insightful)
Just answer my first question before you pose one to me. I'm a confused old man, and I want to know why you would say the democrats are well known for exploiting paper ballots, when the democrats are the ones protesting moving back to paper ballots.
Re:Why the reversal? (Score:3, Insightful)
http://www.elections.state.md.us/citizens/voting_
Scroll down to the bottom section titled "Voting System Selection and Procurement"
It says, in part:
Re:Retards... they're all retards (Score:5, Insightful)
There are two prominent Democrats on the elections committee, and obviously the committee fucked up due to the elections issues. The two 'Democrats' mentioned in the article are those two on this committee whose asses are now on the line for the fuckups so of course these two are trying to fight saying they've been doing a good job so far.
There hasn't been any general opposition by the Maryland Democratic Party, or even amongst a larger Democratic contingent. Erlich turned this into a partisan issue by pounding on the election irregularities by pointing to the incompetence of the election board, which has Democrats in the top spots. The race between Erlich and O'Malley for governor is quite ugly, these two have been bitter political rivals for the past few years already and there has been much ugliness previously (I've lived in Baltimore the past few years. O'Malley is the Democratic Baltimore mayor challenging Erlich, while Erlich is the Republican governor).
Erlich has been a political douchebag tool since he took office, he ignored election problems in Baltimore in 2004, for instance, and fully supported using the Diebold machines. And he mildly brushed aside criticism of the Ohio 2004 election irregularities. He's not some election hero, he's just your typical political opportunist, suddenly supporting an issue he previously ignored just becuase it's politically favorable for him to do so.
Remember, this guy is a candidate for governor, damn near everything he does in the spotlight has a political bent to it. He saw an opportunity and pounced on it.
Re:Surprised? (Score:3, Insightful)
I agree with you in principle, but at the highest levels of government (I'm looking at you, U.S. Congress), voting for your "team" is often the only way to get anything even close to what you want. On the vast majority of issues, the vast majority of the people in Congress will vote the same way everyone else in their party votes. Even if the person you elect spells out a detailed platform, some of which goes against his or her own party, chances are he or she will vote the party line most of the time, even when the party line goes against his or her stated platform.
This is the problem with partisan politics. If you vote for "your" team, you end up getting people who don't necessarily share all of your views, and may vote for something you disagree with. If you don't vote for your team, you end up with someone who says they agree with you, but will most likely vote party line anyway, and will probably vote for things you disagree with. Either way, you're not getting what you really wanted.
Re:Retards... they're all retards (Score:3, Insightful)
No, that's the definition of partisanship. Bipartisanship is exactly the opposite.
Great example of partisanship! And to think, all this time you thought you were being bipartisan.
Re:Why the reversal? (Score:4, Insightful)
What's the first thing Clinton did when he got in office? While pretending to deal with gays in the military (Lots of discussion), he quietly used all his might to push NAFTA through.
NAFTA is simply a gimme to corporate interests, it is one of those issues that is completely conservative, anti-democrat.
What does Bush do? Try to make illegal imigration legal and get more mexicans into the country? Conservatives hate this, dems are supposed to be somewhat okay with it, but again, corporate interests love it. If you really wanted to stop immigration, you'd just set up some serious fines or jailtime for employing immigrants. It'll never happen.
Why do they fight so hard for elections if they are the same party? Splitting the republicrat party into two wings and having them battle for control is a great system!
After seeing what Bush can do, the far left-wing doesn't dare vote green, and if fox can keep coming up with reasons to hate clinton, it'll keep the far right-wing away from voting libretarian.
So the infighting actually secures both parties.
My personal solution is, except in presidential positions or positions where there is actually a "Good" republicrat canidate, I always vote for an alternitave independent--even Libretarian (Which I'm kind of against). If you're ultra-conservative and you can vote dem, repub or green--start voting green. Until they actually start winning elections, all you are doing is showing support for the alternative parties.
If you think your vote makes a difference in the presidental election, go ahead and vote republican or dem, but in other elections, stay away from the republicrats!
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Why doesn't slashdot have a spellcheck function?
Politics of sports (Score:4, Insightful)
Amen, Brother. They have turned politics into a sports show, pitting your favorite team against your favorite team's enemy. If you love the Browns, you hate the Steelers. That's just the way it is. You root for the Browns, or whoever is playing the Steelers. Life is great as long as the Browns win and the Steelers lose.
As long as politics are like that, life is simple. You don't have to look at the voting record, public statements, or platform of a candidate. You just have to know their color, red or blue or some color not red or blue. You don't have to weigh the actions of a politician, you just have to say we have to support him because he's our President (or governor, or police chief, or what-have-you).
Life is simple then. People like simple. It's all red or blue, no shades of purple.
A friend of mine (hi, Thor) is a republican. Except for that, he and I are very much the same. He's a good guy. He supports democracy, and constitutional freedom, and peace. He and I have the same ideals, we just have different thoughts on how best to achieve (or maintain) those ideals.
The blood in our veins is blue. The blood in our arteries is red. It's never as simple as one vs. the other, and I wish those in charge would stop exploiting the sports-mentality to distract us from domestic and international troubles.
Re:Partisanship (Score:3, Insightful)
Thats an easy one. The republicans want to move back to paper ballots. Of course the democrats will take the opposite stance.
Little do they know its a trap. See, after the democrats fight tooth and nail to oppose paper ballots the republicans will simply agree with them. WHAM. Democrats have no more right to bitch about electronic voting. Sneaky republicans..
Re:Why the reversal? (Score:3, Insightful)
Interesting.
Re:Partisanship (Score:3, Insightful)
You just hear less about it nationally than the Diebold stuff because it's Democrats.
US 2 party politics (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not that simple and it's pretty unreasonable to make such baseless claims against the party as a whole.
I think the interesting thing is how many of the very powerful and respected politicians are making significant breaks with their party. In the US this infighting seems to be much more common when they're arguing with the president.
I think it is important to note that many if not most from both parties who really want to have fair elections, even if they're not quite sure how to achieve that.
Re:Partisanship (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why the reversal? (Score:2, Insightful)
Recounts were only called for in strongly Democratic counties and in those very liberal readings of the ballots were being used to qualify as many as possible. Now working to read as many votes as possible is not a bad thing, but when you do it only in the places where one party predominates you are skewing the results in favor of one party. To pretend that the Dems were the good guys in all of this when they were clearly up to their necks in attempts to skew the results is disingenuous at best.
And, btw, before you start accusing me of only seeing one side of the issue, I've never voted for Bush and would have been happy to see him lose in 2004, but stupid conspiracy crap and cry-baby politics are beyond annoying. If you really wanted things to change you'd vote against incumbents and support a 3rd party instead of queuing up like a good little sheep and casting your vote for the Republicrat machine.
Re:Partisanship (Score:4, Insightful)
I, a Republican, was in the local county paper on Tuesday morning criticizing the County Auditor over all-mail voting. I was also a candidate in the primary, on the ballot (unopposed), that same day. But my name was actually hidden on the electronic voting machine ballot. You could not see my name to vote for me. And my name was the only one this happened to: me, the guy in the paper that day criticizing the Auditor.
If I were a Democrat and he a Republican, chances are, this would be front-page news everywhere. "Republicans manipulate voting machines to keep Democrat off ballot." But since I am a Republican and I realize it was probably merely an unfortunate coincidence, I just post about it, but don't make it into a big deal.
So excuse me for thinking that criticisms pointed at Republicans being the ones who manipulating elections, are a bunch of garbage; I see firsthand -- with all the problems in WA in 2000 and 2004, including the unreported ones -- that it's just not true.
There is simply no truth to the implications that Republicans manipulate elections more than Democrats (and I tend to believe it is the other way around, though since I have always lived in Democrat states -- CA, MA, WA -- that certainly colors my perspective). It's just that for whatever reasons, the stuff about Republicans gets more press, and less benefit-of-the-doubt.
Right wing political mail (Score:4, Insightful)
Because the dangerous party is the one in power (Score:4, Insightful)
Crooked elections perpetuate the rule of whoever's in charge.
One key virtue of democracy is that it allows throwing out incompetent, dishonest, or damaging rulers (if anyone cares) without blood in the street. Crooked elections hurt because they block the vital function of throwing the bums out and putting another set of bums in.
The only reason vote fraud looks like a Republican issue is that Republicans are in power. We'll have the same fight forever, be it Greens, the Reform Party, or the Natural Law Party in charge.
Don't elect, draft... (Score:5, Insightful)