http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A61273-2004Jan29.html
Bipartisan Request Seeks
Halt to Internet Voting
Groups
Fear Citizens Abroad Will Be Compromised
By
Dan Keating
Washington
Post Staff Writer
Friday,
January 30, 2004; Page A19
In
a highly unusual pairing, the Republican and Democratic party organizations for
citizens living abroad have banded together against the Pentagon's Internet
voting program for the presidential election.
Concerns
about the security of the online ballots could cast the entire election under a
cloud of suspicion, they said in a joint letter urging a halt in the
program. The letter released yesterday
is being sent to several congressional committees.
"We
do not want to undermine confidence in our system of voting by discovering some
real or imagined fraud in the November balloting," wrote the leaders of
Republicans Abroad and Democrats Abroad.
The
partisan groups called their cooperation historic. They are joined in their
opposition by the Association of Americans Resident Overseas, American Citizens
Abroad and the Federation of American Women's Clubs Overseas, which are sending
a separate appeal to Congress and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld.
"We've
heard so much about the doubtful security of online voting, so we're concerned
that we're going too fast," said Lucy Laederich, U.S. liaison for the
women's clubs. "One day this might be absolutely wonderful. In the
meantime, we might find ourselves with a kind of a super-2000 disaster, and
people will think online voting will never be possible."
The
opposition has prompted Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney (D-N.Y.) to seek congressional
allies to lobby Rumsfeld to stop the Internet vote for the presidential race.
The
Pentagon's Federal Voting Assistance Program is sponsoring a $22 million
Internet voting experiment. Fifty counties in seven states have signed up, and
about 100,000 ballots are expected to be cast. The program is open to all
military and civilian overseas residents from those counties.
The
online experiment suffered a setback a week ago when four computer security
specialists asked to review the program released a report saying that the
Internet and personal computers running Microsoft Windows are so inherently
insecure that online voting would be subject to hacking. They urged a halt in
the program for fear that ballots collected online could undermine the
integrity of the election. The four were part of a group of 10 academics and
other experts involved in a $1.8 million review of the program under the
leadership of R. Michael Alvarez, co-director of the CalTech-MIT/Voting
Technology Project and co-author of the book "Point, Click & Vote: The
Future of Internet Voting." Alvarez said he wants the full group to issue
a report after the election to evaluate how the program performed.
The
project will help voters who have a hard time getting and casting ballots and
will provide guidance for developing a secure broader system, said Accenture
eDemocracy Services, the consultant developing the Pentagon system.
"The
group's decision is premature," spokesman James McAvoy said. "Up to
50 percent of all servicemen and women and citizens living abroad find it
difficult if not impossible to have their vote counted each election year. This
is a serious problem that deserves serious consideration."
Pentagon
spokesman Glenn Flood said it will continue reviewing security concerns but
intends to go forward with the program.
The
Internet project has not received formal certification required for all voting
equipment, so it is not being used for Tuesday's primary in South Carolina.
Depending on when certification is completed, it could be used for subsequent
primaries in Utah, Florida, North Carolina and Arkansas. It is expected to be
used for the general election in all of those states, as well as in Washington
and Hawaii.
The
letters from the groups abroad emphasized that they are eager to facilitate
overseas voting. In interviews, they praised the Federal Voting Assistance
Program's Web site, which has information and a form to let them request paper
absentee ballots.
"If
the request for getting a ballot is expedited, that's great," said Ryan
King, speaking for Republicans Abroad. "But the actual ballot, the actual
voting, we have strong concerns about that.
The security concerns outweigh any potential convenience."
Joseph
Smallhoover, former chairman of Democrats Abroad, said there are about 6.5
million civilians overseas and 500,000 service members and their dependents.
"We
would love to have a system that makes it easier for the people overseas to
vote easily," he said, "but if it's going to raise serous questions
about the validity of the election itself, we'd rather have a system with a
paper trail and not subject to serious doubt. We doubt that the nation wants to
go through the same sort of turmoil that we did in 2000."
Overseas
ballots arriving after Election Day were a significant part of the Florida
election debacle. That election led to
national reforms for more reliable voting equipment as well as better ways for
gathering votes from abroad.
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