ACLU Challenges Ohio’s Unequal Voting Technology in Federal Court (1/17/2008)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org; (212) 549-2666 New Voting System Will Result in More Uncounted
Ballots
CLEVELAND – The
American Civil Liberties Union and ACLU of Ohio filed a lawsuit against state
election officials in federal court today challenging the use of unequal,
inaccurate and inadequate voting technology in
Ohio’s most populous county.
Today’s legal action seeks to block Cuyahoga County’s recent shift from using
electronic voting machines to a system that lacks the ability to provide voters
with notice of balloting errors and an opportunity to correct such mistakes.
According to the ACLU, the use of this new system violates the Constitution’s
Fourteenth Amendment as well as the Voting Rights Act.
“Every voting system – paper ballot or not – must give voters
a chance to fix a mistake. Many votes will go uncounted if voters cannot verify
that their ballots have been filled out correctly,” said Meredith Bell-Platts, a
staff attorney with the ACLU Voting Rights Project. “Mandating an unequal voting
system is intolerable and will inevitably lead to preventable disfranchisement.
With Ohio’s presidential primary
only weeks away, Cuyahoga
County must abandon its deeply flawed
and unreliable voting technology in order to protect the rights of every
voter.”
Last month, Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner cast a
tie-breaking vote that forced Cuyahoga
County to adopt a central count
optical scan system (CCOS), in which paper ballots are immediately shipped to a
central location where they are “read” by an optical scan machine. Under this
arrangement, voters are given no opportunity to correct a mistake on their
ballots. However, optical scan voting systems are available with counting
features that provide error notification to voters at polling places. When using
these systems – that are already used by several counties statewide – the voter
inserts his or her ballot directly into the counting equipment, which can reject
any ballot with an overvote or that cannot be read. A voter with a rejected
ballot then has an opportunity to correct the vote. This error notification
substantially reduces the risk that an individual’s vote will not be counted.
Brunner and Cuyahoga
County rejected this
method.
“A system that protects every vote equally is not a luxury,
it is a constitutional right,” said Carrie Davis, staff counsel with the ACLU of
Ohio. “It is unacceptable for some
Ohio voters to have the
opportunity to identify and fix errors on their ballots, while other voters do
not. The technology is available to correct this flaw and there is no reason to
ignore this problem. In addition to its constitutional violations, the new
system presents an untold logistical and financial disaster on the eve of the
2008 elections.”
Ohio adopted
voting technology that provided error notices to voters in 2006. In the 2004
case, Stewart v. Blackwell, the ACLU
challenged punch card and central count optical scans that did not provide the
voters with notification of ballot problems. Research has shown that if the
voter is given an opportunity to correct his or her ballot, the number of
uncounted votes is greatly reduced.
The case is ACLU v.
Brunner and is in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Ohio.
Attorneys in the case are Bell-Platts, Laughlin McDonald and
Neil Bradley of the ACLU, Davis of the ACLU of Ohio, and cooperating attorneys
Paul Moke and Richard Saphire. The lawsuit was brought against Ohio Secretary of
State Jennifer Brunner, the Cuyahoga County Board of Commissioners, and the
Cuyahoga County Board of Elections on behalf of the ACLU of Ohio and voters
across the county.
Today’s legal complaint is available at: www.aclu.org/votingrights/gen/33713lgl20080117.html
More information on the ACLU Voting Rights Project is
available at: www.votingrights.org
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