Provisional Ballots Raise New Questions
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, Aug. 10, 2004
WASHINGTON Tens of thousands of Americans will vote in
November using a special kind of ballot that must be counted by
hand, potentially leaving the outcome of the presidential election
in doubt as elections officials argue over each vote.
Sound familiar?
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Although it might stir memories of hanging and pregnant chads
from the 2000 election, the "provisional ballot" is a new
national voting requirement meant to ensure no voter is turned
away. For the first time, provisional ballots will be available at
precincts nationwide for those who can't find their names listed at
the polls.
Yet, just three months before what looks to be another extremely
close presidential election, states don't agree about how to count
these ballots. Some localities are worried they won't have time to
tally them, and voting rights advocates fear many won't be counted
at all.
"They do have the potential to be the chad of 2004," said Doug
Chapin, director of the Election Reform Information Project, a
nonpartisan group that studies elections. "Given that you have to
basically ascertain the validity of a ballot, ballot by ballot, you
open yourself up to the same kind of high-stakes politicization of
the process we saw in Florida in 2000."
The Help America Vote Act of 2002 mandated provisional ballots.
The idea was to prevent properly registered voters from being
turned away from the polls because of clerical errors with
registration lists or other problems. Civil rights groups estimate
that happened to 1.5 million or more voters in 2000.
Under the new law, anyone who claims to be registered in the
jurisdiction where they try to vote but whose name is not listed
must be given a provisional ballot. If the voter's registration
information is verified later, the ballot is included in the total
for the election.
No one knows how many provisional ballots will be cast in
November, in part because only about half the states allowed such
ballots or something similar in 2000. It will easily be tens of
thousands nationwide. In Los Angeles County alone, 44,000 were cast
in the March primary.
But verifying voter eligibility and hand-counting the ballots
takes a long time. Some states, by law, give counties just days to
finish. That has election administrators contemplating a nightmare
scenario: What happens if the number of provisional ballots is
bigger than the apparent margin of victory on Election Day? The
outcome could hang in doubt while election officials rush to beat
the clock.
"It would be like Florida in 2000, basically," said Thomas
Leach, spokesman for the elections board in Chicago, where voters
cast 5,914 provisional ballots in the March primary.
"We've talked about this all year, the fact that there could be
a big delay in the counting of these and the determination of who
the victor was," Leach said. "It was a task just going through
the 5,914 applications. ... If you've got 50,000, it can overwhelm
you."
Election officials say it could happen. In fact, it already has.
In a Utah city council primary last year, the outcome hinged on
31 provisional ballots.
Kansas has used provisional ballots since 1975. "Every election
cycle, there is a race somewhere in the state of Kansas decided by
provisional ballots," said Secretary of State Ron Thornburgh.
Adding to the potential for confusion, states differ over how
and when provisional ballots are counted.
Some, like California, New Mexico and Pennsylvania, count at
least the statewide and national races on provisional ballots cast
in the wrong locality. Others, including Florida, Illinois and
Indiana, don't count a provisional ballot at all unless the voter
is in the right precinct.
"That is the problem with provisional balloting under the Help
America Vote Act," said Maria Valdez, midwest regional counsel for
Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, which is
considering a lawsuit on the grounds that voters aren't treated
equally.
"It really could look like it's trying to open access, but
because it is based on a state-by-state determination, it really
could restrict access," Valdez said.
Valdez and other activists cite Chicago's primary. Of the 5,914
provisional ballots cast, only 416 were ever counted. A total of
1,294 came from voters in the wrong precinct, 2,461 from voters who
didn't fill out an affidavit properly and 1,461 from people who
could not be verified as registered voters, according to Chicago's
elections board.
Another factor is time. In Illinois, officials have 14 days to
tally provisional ballots, while in California it's 28 days.
Florida and Georgia give elections officials just two days, raising
the possibility of another court battle if time is running out and
ballots that could tip the election remain uncounted.
Some Florida elections officials are confident they'll be able
to validate and count any provisional ballots within the allotted
time, but others aren't so sure.
"It's an incredible problem," said Ion Sancho, supervisor of
elections in Leon County, Fla. "But that's what the legislature
told us to deal with, so that's what we deal with."
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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