Tag Archives: 2006 elections

My voting experience

Salt Lake County decided to consolidate polling places and as a result there were long lines.  I went to vote after work and arrived at my polling place at around 6:30pm.  I waiting in a long line outside for about 1/2 hour and another 1/2 hour inside (including voting time).  Not only that, there was only one table with one person checking off names with one assistant.

What’s up with that?

I will elaborate in my actual vote expereience at a later time.  There’s some news coming down the pike about vote machines in which I will be involved.

Election Outcome: Don’t celebrate yet

Over on One Utah, folks are celebrating the outcome of the elections with “Demo Glad”.

But many of us are skeptical, and justifiably so, given the Dems record in recent years.

Margy Waller, he project director of The Mobility Agenda at The Center for Community Change, has authored a piece called Why I’m Not Celebrating Yet:

Apparently, we’re in for a couple years of change and disappointingly incremental policymaking. Signals are clear—and all over the press.

For example, just two days after the “left turn” election, we heard that “Victorious Democrats vow cooperative approach on taxes and the economy.” Well, bollocks.

My friends and family keep asking if I am excited, celebrating, partying up a storm, and so on. I am not.

Everyone assumes that inclusionist economic policies stand a chance of implementation in the next Congress. Well, maybe—some of those ideas. But is it a new day for equitable economic policy? Not so much…not just yet.

Of course, it’s good news that so many of the president’s worst ideas are now buried deep and going nowhere. Plans to further reduce taxes on the wealthy (by eliminating the estate tax) and kill the universal retirement system (by privatizing Social Security) are dead in the 110th Congress.

But, we aren’t likely to see meaningful progress on economic fairness and inclusion just because both houses have new leadership.

Why not? It’s our own fault. Progressives haven’t given members of Congress a clear signal about what we want in years. Instead, the message from the think tank and advocacy crowd on economic and social policy has been: “Get the best deal you can!” and “Take the crumbs, if that’s all you can get from your seat at the table.”

Even more importantly, we’ve in no way prepared the public to demand or support steps that improve our national economy by increasing economic and social mobility. We’ve barely touched on the need to strengthen the 30 percent of the labor market that is made up of jobs paying less than $10 an hour. We hardly ever focus our advocacy and media work on the damage to our economy stemming from the large and growing percentage of jobs no one could call “decent work.”

And until voters demand equitable economic policy, we should not expect members of Congress to take the lead.

We can expect smallish changes like the very belated minimum wage increase that is on the “to-do” list of our madam speaker-elect. But, will Congress take the next logical step—one adopted by many of the successful state initiative campaigns: Ensuring that wages increase automatically with the cost of living?

Will Congress pursue any of the other new ideas developing at the state and local level to strengthen economic mobility by making bad jobs into better jobs?

Will we see federal policy movement toward the delinking of health care coverage from employment, like steps taken in a few states and one locality (San Francisco, natch)?

How about ensuring that all employees are offered a limited number of paid sick days as one city (yeah, yeah—San Francisco again) did on November 8?

Will Congress take action to clarify that employees are free to organize and negotiate for better jobs?

Sure, it’s not necessarily wrong for incoming leadership to signal a desire to cooperate with the administration and other conservatives. That’s all the voters are truly prepared to accept at this point. It’s our job to start demanding better policy in the future.

We’ve already heard “progressives” advising the new leadership to “resist the impulse to pursue big ambitions.” This might be the right political advice for today, but it is also strong evidence that another kind of institution is required—one that has the freedom to focus on long-term goals and a mission specific to policy outcomes, uncolored by campaign goals.

It’s no good thinking that we can hold our fire now and turn to the bigger stuff in 2008, when many hope that progressives will still be surfing the wave of voter discontent with conservatives. We have to start sharing our most ambitious goals now, if we want them to be adopted by future candidates, members of Congress, and presidential administrations.

The thing about the new Congress is not so much what its members choose to do, as what we share with them about our expectations. If our stated goals are limited, then the outcomes will be small-bore and we shouldn’t be disappointed. It’s not about them; it’s about what we want.

Oh Joy, It’s Official

It’s official: Pelosi is speaker: But Demos rebuff her, pick Hoyer over Murtha

Here is what Pelosi promises:

“We made history and now we will make progress for the American people,” the Californian told fellow Democrats moments after her selection in the closed meeting, according to officials familiar with her remarks.
She pledged that after 12 years in the minority, “we will not be dazzled by money and special interests.”

More on Voting Maching Troubles

From Kathy Dopp:

Here is just ONE (1) day of news stories re. electronic voting problems in November 7 election (stories are continuing to unfold). One county using Diebold voting machines in another state has still not announced their election results due to memory card failures. Utah county’s “glitch” disenfranchised voters and touchscreens caused long lines in Utah. Federal law only requires ONE (1) touchscreen voting machine in each polling place for the disabled to use – Utah could use optical scan paper ballots which are conveniently manually auditable, voter verified, less expensive, cause no long lines; and are not susceptible to power outages, denial of service attacks, and vote flipping attacks. Is there any reason to trust insufficiently manually audited invisible e-ballots which are secretly counted by proprietary humanly-unreadable machine language software on voting machines whose components are made in China, Canada, and various U.S. states?
————————————————————————
It took over 24 hours for Cook Co. Illinois to count their votes. That’s with their brand-new Smartmatic clone Sequoia voting machines. County Clerk David Orr conceded that the hardware and software being used should be re-examined. / One of the striking problems that has come up around the country is the reason for long lines in many places. They just didn’t buy enough machines for the turnout they had. Another boon for the vendors when all they really needed to do was buy one Precinct-Based Optical Scan (PBOS) for each precinct and there would have been no need to go out and buy more DRE machines. And the cause of the long lines in Denver; poorly written, poorly tested voter registration software from Sequoia.

Other articles:
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Manual Audit of Summit County Today

Kathy Dopp, Desert Greens candidate for Summit County Clerk sent this today:

In Summit County, the manual audit is being held today (Monday) at 10 a.m. at the County Building.

I assume that the manual audits are also being held today in other counties, but please call your own county clerk to find out for sure.

In Summit County, the final canvass is being held on Wednesday at 9:30 a.m. at the County Courthouse.

It would be great to go observe the manual audit and final vote canvass for your county. I’ve been told that the public may observe the manual audit, even though the written procedures do not require it – except to say a counting poll worker or watcher may observe – which I think means that anyone appointed by a political party or a candidate may observe.

We have an time critical need here in Utah. Please help find a Utah Senator and Utah Congressional Rep in the Utah Legislature to sponsor our independent audit legislation:

Click to access VoteCountAudit-UT.pdf

based on scientifically agreed-upon election audit principles (posted at the National Institute of Standards and Technology web site):

Click to access ElectionIntegrityAudit.pdf

Kathy Dopp
http://electionarchive.org
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GETTING OVER IT – The Citizen Push for Election Integrity

From Bruce Funk in Emery County, who was locked out of his own office to keep him from going to work after having computer scientists discover that Diebold had sold Utah used, refjected voting machines from other states with security holes big enough to drive a truck through.

Share your voting experience with the US League of Women Voters  or attempt to inform them about other sites where problems voters had are listed.

 
E L E C T I O N    F O L L O W – U P    A L E R T

Election Day may be over but we’d like to hear about your voting experience. We’ve designed a survey to allow you to share your voting experience with the League. It is your personal story, Kathy, along with other statistics, that will provide the basis for Election Day 2006 follow-up.

If you voted a provisional ballot, we want to remind you to follow-up with your local elections official because you may need to show ID or proof of registration in order for your provisional ballot to be counted. All states have a free access system for voters to use to find out if their provisional ballot was counted. For more information on provisional voting, please check the state specific information on www.VOTE411.org or call one of the free hotlines listed on our 5 Things You Need To Know On Election Day cards.

We look forward to hearing from you and continuing our work to educate voters and improve the election system.

Sincerely,

Mary G. Wilson
Mary G. Wilson
President, League of Women Voters of the United States

PROTECT YOUR VOTE!

5 Things You Need to Know on Election Day

Read these important tips!

Election Day Problems? Call Toll Free:
1-866-MYVOTE1 OR 1-866-OUR-VOTE OR 1-888-VE-Y-VOTA

Join Us in Making Democracy Work at www.lwv.org

More on Green Candidates in the U.S.

Richmond, California Green City
Councilmember
Gayle McLaughlin was elected Mayor of Richmond yesterday. Richmond is located in northern California, in the East Bay county of Contra Costa.

McLauglin’s victory makes her Mayor of the largest U.S. city yet (pop. 103,000).

Previously the largest city to have a Green Mayor was Santa Monica, CA (pop. 90,000), where (yours truly) Mike Feinstein was Mayor from 2000-2002. However, Feinstein was appointed by the City Council,
whereas McLaughlin was directly elected.

Of the 31 U.S. Greens who have served as Mayors, nine have been directly elected and 22 appointed. Of those directly elected, all had previously come from small cities and towns, with the only city over 7,000 being
Websters Grove, MO (2000 pop. 23,000) where Terry Williams served between 1994-1997.

The first U.S. Green Mayor ever was Kelly Weaverling, Cordova, Alaska (1991-1993), who was directly elected in the aftermath of the Exxon Valdez oil spill, with Weaverling being an important activist involved in the post-spill clean-up.

The 22 that have been appointed have all came from California, where most cities have a City Manager/City Council form of government, with an appointed Mayor who serves various roles, but not as a chief executive,
nor with veto power over the Council.

Some California cities – mostly the larger ones like Los Angeles, Long Beach, Oakland, San Diego and San Francisco – have directly elected ‘strong mayors’ who serve as the chief executives of their cities. In
Richmond’s case, the Mayor is separately elected, but is not a ‘strong’ mayor in the traditional large-city sense.

According to the Richmond city government website:

“The Mayor is a member of the City Council and the chief elected
officer and ceremonial head of the City. The Mayor is also responsible
for:

  • Informing City residents of policies and developments
  • Working with the City Manager on the annual budget
  • Making recommendations to the City Council on policies and programs”

    For a complete list of U.S. Green Mayors since 1991, see:
    http://www.feinstein.org/greenparty/greenmayors.html
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  • LGBT candidates elected in Utah

    Equality Utah sent this out today:

    Equality Utah is pleased to announce that 17 of our 37 endorsed candidates were elected in yesterday’s elections!

    Even more, we’re so proud of our LGBT candidates who were elected – Senator Scott McCoy (District 2) and Representatives Jackie Biskupski (District 30) and Christine Johnson (District 25)! Utah is now 1 of only 11 states with more than 2 openly gay and/or lesbian elected officials in the state legislature. We’re definitely moving toward a fair & just Utah!

    2006 Elections and Greens

    The 2006 Elections are now history.
    I got a little over 4% in my race (not bad for the first time and little campaigning time). Desert Greens Candidate Kathy Dopp got 23% of her race in Summit County for County Clerk.

    Here are the Green Results that I’ve collected so far:

    Utah:Desert Greens
    Summit County Clerk
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