Nov. 5, 2006

Getting Ugly Early On Election Law

If History Is A Guide, New Voting Laws And Technologies Might Create As Many Problems As They Solve

  • Play CBS Video Video Worries Over High-Tech Voting

    The reliability of the electronic voting machines is in question this election. It is also unclear whether the people operating the machines can make them work. Armen Keteyian reports.

  • Video Potential Voting Problems

    New voting machines, new procedures and new ID requirements are just some of the potential polling problems that effect midterm elections. Susan Roberts reports.

  • Video How To Steal An Election

    Only On The Web: Prof. Ed Felten of Princeton University demonstrates how a computer virus can cause a voting machine to steal votes and alter the outcome of an election.

  • Palm Beach County Judge Charles Burton holds up a ballot as Democratic lawyer Mark White, left, and Republican lawyer (and future U.N. ambassador) John Bolton watch, on Nov. 26, 2000, in West Palm Beach, Fla. The recount of presidential ballots was discontinued — with as many as 1,000 questionable punchcards unchecked — after Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris rejected a request for more time.

    Palm Beach County Judge Charles Burton holds up a ballot as Democratic lawyer Mark White, left, and Republican lawyer (and future U.N. ambassador) John Bolton watch, on Nov. 26, 2000, in West Palm Beach, Fla. The recount of presidential ballots was discontinued — with as many as 1,000 questionable punchcards unchecked — after Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris rejected a request for more time.  (AP)

  • Interactive Campaign 2006

    Complete coverage and analysis of Senate and key House races, plus gubernatorial elections.

(CBS)  Attorney Andrew Cohen analyzes legal issues for CBS News and CBSNews.com.


There are, as you know, a million things that can go wrong Tuesday when millions of us go to the polls to vote. In the weeks leading up to the 2006 midterm election we were reminded of a great many of these things, and of the legal consequences and chaos should any one of them, or several of them, actually occur.

We have heard about voter-ID clashes in Indiana and Arizona. We’ve heard about the potential for electronic voting inaccuracies in Colorado and Pennsylvania. And the folks in Maryland know from their September primary just how badly things can go there at the polling places. All of these bubbling pre-election conflicts have the potential to generate post-election litigation that could sway a race and, given the current Red-State, Blue-State divide, perhaps even the balance of power in Congress.

Responding to the catastrophe that was Palm Beach County's infamous "butterfly ballot," for example, lawmakers have tried to bring new technologies into the voting process — only to find that using electronic voting machines (with inexperienced handlers and shoddy technicians) brings a whole new set of headaches into the mix.

Responding to increased concerns about voter fraud (or at least the potential for it), Republicans have sought to tighten up identity-requirements — only to find that the courts haven't been receptive to their efforts (mostly because the new rules violate equal protection principles).

Any way you look at it, it's clear that not nearly enough of America's voting systems have been fixed since the Grand Debacle that was Florida 2000, despite the fact that the federal government devoted about $3 billion to make it so. That is why this election, even more so than its two predecessors, will be conducted with one eye on the ballots (however they are submitted and counted) and one eye upon the courthouses (wherever they may be found).

Just as the great political prognosticators on cable television glory in calling Senate or House races before they are concluded, so too one day will legal forecasters perhaps predict which states' electoral laws will implode from the force and weight of a close contest. And this year, as they might say, it's a toss up.

The voting-machine disaster, if there is to be one, will emerge and become actionable only after the new machines are used (or abused) on Tuesday. In an online piece last week titled "Fingers Crossed," CBS News Investigative Producer Phil Hirschkorn reminds us that on Tuesday, "4 out of 5 voters across America will use touch-screen machines or optical scanners to cast their ballots. More than one-third of the electorate will vote electronically for the first time, raising questions about whether voters, machines and poll workers are up to the task."

But the identification-requirement cases already have been wafting through the courts. In Texas, a lawsuit challenging new portions of the Texas Election Code which would make it harder for people to vote by mail, made it all the way to Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, who over the weekend politely but firmly declined to continue to prevent state officials from enforcing the restrictions.

And in Ohio, an 11th-hour deal stopped state officials there from imposing more stringent ID-requirements. In both states, as in all the rest, nervous officials are holding their breath hoping the worst doesn't happen that would spawn a series of post-election challenges to the more spurious aspects of the political "ground game" in place for both major parties.

But let's focus on Texas, the President's home state, where election officials probably all have neck sprains from the back-and-forth tussle that has gone on in the federal courts over the past few weeks.

The journey started in September when a group of potential voters (potential Democratic voters, one would surmise) sued Texas to halt enforcement of a new election law that criminalizes the possession of the mail-in-ballot of another voter. On October 13, the plaintiffs asked a federal trial judge for an injunction — an emergency court order — halting what they called intimidating and "chilling" efforts by state officials to enforce the new rules.

Last Monday, the trial judge held a hearing on the matter and on Halloween agreed to block Texas from prosecuting "a person, other than the voter, [who] has merely possessed the official ballot or official carrier envelope and such possession is with the actual consent of the voter."

Seems reasonable, right? Because you don't have to be creative or a litigation strategist (or a Republican or a Democrat) to see a scenario where one person might be needed (say, for medical reasons) to help carry out another person's mail-in vote.

But on Friday, just a few days before the election, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, long a conservative thorn in the side of the Supreme Court, declined to back up the trial judge. The federal appeals court did not explain its rationale; it just unfroze the frozen Texas law, thus allowing election officials to threaten those mail-in ballot carriers with a crime. And then, Justice Scalia — who didn't hesitate to interject the Supreme Court into the 2000 post-election legal fight — refused to do so in the pre-election Lone Star battle.

Got that? That's just a brief description of one fight in one state over one fairly discreet issue. Multiply that by about a hundred and you begin to get a sense of the universe out there for potential litigation as we head toward Campaign 3 P.C. (Post-Chad).

If the 2000 presidential election reminded us that voting is an imperfect science, this coming mid-term could confirm for us that elections in the 21st Century are just as eternally litigious as everything else in this great country of ours.

Andrew Cohen
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Share:
  • Share
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Mixx
Add a Comment See all 12 Comments
by tibu987 November 6, 2006 4:31 PM EST
It seems that putting a check mark on a paper ballot was, just like in the old days, the most reliable. DUH!
Too much room for monkey business with electronic voting machines.
When over, with the write in ballot you first match the amount of ballots against how many voters registered, then have members of both parties present, count them, and they must match.
You are also in and out faster as they do not have to teach you how to manage the electronic voting.
Sounds more honest to me.
Reply to this comment
by usawatchman November 6, 2006 3:55 PM EST
WATCH OUT FOR REPUBLICANS
ATTEMPTING TO STEAL VOTES

The republicans tell us ALL DAY
they are catching up in the polls
they are going to pull it out of the fire..
==========
I was watching NASCAR yesterday
Guess who was there to tell the drivers to start their engines

It was the Texas Republican Senator Kay Baily Hutchinson

Talk about a SAMPLE of the REPUBLICAN Party
of ALL the NASCAR fans in the stands in Ft. Worth, Tx

1) A MAJORITY did NOT CHEER for her.
2) those who were vocal, BOO-ED her.

It had to be embarrassing for her, and of coarse Wednesday Morning
we will hear how she just skimmed by and got elected again..

The republicans tell us they are catching up in the polls
it is A LIE...!

We need to make it a CAPITAL CRIME
to Conspire ,Tamper, or manipulate voting BALLOTS

If we catch these people, get a SPEEDY TRIAL
they are to lined up against the wall
and SHOT as TRAITORS...!

WATCH OUT FOR REPUBLICANS
ATTEMPTING TO STEAL VOTES
Reply to this comment
by clestes-2009 November 6, 2006 1:37 PM EST
This year is going down in history. No guessing on that. Here in MO, I have witnessed the most ridiculous, absurd, downright stupid antics any sensible person has ever seen. The conspiracy theorists are out in full force. It must be the full moon in combination with the election cycle or something.

I think Talent is hedging his bets. He knows he has a good chance of losing and if it is at all close, he will start spouting liberal laced fears. He has been the biggest disappointment next to Matt Blunt most of us have seen and to now see him running scared is funny if not downright sad.



Reply to this comment
by bluestardad November 6, 2006 11:42 AM EST
Be Ever Vigilant. Bush and Rove will do anything to stay in power up to an including flooding key districts with fake absentee ballots tampering with electronic voting machines, and bussing in voters who are not from the districts to vote, or even starting another war with and suspending civil liberties postponing the mid term vote. There is a great possibility for this administration to tamper with the electronic voting machines to the point that very subtle differences will take place in Key races just enough to tip the vote in their favor but not enough to cause a full scale American Revolution leaving some doubt, but just enough to throw key races in the Republican Favor. Watch out for this election coup.
Reply to this comment
by ozoneliar November 5, 2006 10:42 PM EST
Mr Cohen: Justice Scalia did not issue a ruling on his own. He reffered the matter to the court which delivered an opinion. Do your research better next time.

See: http://moritzlaw.osu.edu/electionlaw/litigation/documents/Ray%20Order%20Denying%20Stay.pdf
Reply to this comment
by pendragon679 November 5, 2006 7:00 PM EST
When voting electronically (or so I understand) a paper receipt can be requested, though many areas haven't implemented that part of the technology. I also believe that cameras in polling locations are illegal, for the same reasons that you're required to turn off your cell phone. I agree, we need serious election reform in this country; but I fear this just won't happen unitl enough people figure out that the current system is broken. Sadly, the voters of this country are little more than sheep, content to follow the leader and assume they'll be taken where they want to go.
Reply to this comment
by pendragon679 November 5, 2006 6:56 PM EST
Actually, this isn't, strictly speaking, a national election. It's fifty state elections; thus each election is subject to each state's individual election laws.

As to how stupid the people of Texas can be, I offer only three words: George Walker Bush.
Reply to this comment
by cantshutup November 5, 2006 6:24 PM EST
If a person has to vote electronically, is there a paper receipt? Can a citizen demand a paper ballot? I was thinking of taking my digital camera with me when I vote and photographing myself in front of the screen or ballot...
Reply to this comment
by abbe7 November 5, 2006 6:13 PM EST
In Belgium, we have a new slogan: "Le vote ilectronique nuit gravement ` la dimocratie" that
could be translated to something like "Electronic
vote is harmful to democracy", like "Tabacco is harmful to your health", printed in a frame with a bold black edge.
Reply to this comment
by jn122736 November 5, 2006 5:00 PM EST
Is Texas going to arrest the postal worker,the rural mail carrier. or even those required to count the votes for doing their jobs? How stupid can they be?
Reply to this comment
See all 12 Comments
Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: