Saturday, February 4, 2012
You may have heard or read about post-election recounts after the recent primary. The reports were incorrect. There were no recounts. Connecticut law calls for something else, a recanvass.
The current recanvass law and procedures are inadequate to assure that the every vote is counted accurately and the correct winner certified. Experience shows that the current law is not well understood by election officials, candidates, and the media. The recanvass is often referred to as a recount, yet it is a far cry from the thorough, transparent, and adversarial recount process in other states. A positive example was the highly publicized Minnesota recount of the U.S. Senate race in 2008.
Connecticut's current recanvass procedures are designed to parallel, for optical scanners, a law which was written for lever machines. In the age of lever machines recanvassing meant rereading counters of lever machines and recounting absentee ballots by hand. The current parallel optical scan procedure calls for rescanning most ballots and hand counting those that election officials deem to have a potential for being misinterpreted by the scanner.
The procedures to select ballots for hand counting are inadequate and do not spell out how ballots should be examined and the standards for manually evaluating them that would conform to law and precedent. Bubbles can be incompletely filled so that they might not be read by the scanner; the voter may have missed the bubble completely; the voter may have crossed out one candidate bubble and filled in another, which the machine would not have counted as a vote; and there may be voter identifying marks on either side of the ballot, which would disqualify the ballot altogether. Observing two optical scan recanvasses, I have seen that, in general, neither candidates nor election officials understand these important details.
The recanvass process is not transparent. The public may only observe from a distance. Even if candidates understand the details, they are only allowed two observers each to watch the entire process. Observers may not object during the process unless election officials consent and act on the objections. Two observers may be insufficient if more than two critical operations are being performed simultaneously, such as multiple teams counting ballots while others assess the scanability of ballots. Some municipalities have separate teams simultaneously counting several districts. Once again, my experience shows that officials and candidates do not generally understand how closely the process should be observed.
Compare that to the way Minnesota handles recounts: All votes are reviewed and counted by hand by teams of two officials, each team closely observed by a representative of each candidate. Both sides of each ballot are shown and examined for disqualifying voter identifying marks. The officials determine if and how each ballot counts. Any of the candidate representatives can disagree, in which case the ballot will later be adjudicated by agreement of the campaigns or, when necessary, by a state canvassing board.
The need for change in Connecticut is evident from the recent primary and recanvass of the race for state representative between incumbent Kenneth Green and Matthew Ritter in Hartford and Bloomfield. Preliminary results had Green ahead by two votes and the recanvass has Ritter ahead by two votes. Just one vote assigned to the wrong candidate or just two votes disqualified could mean a tie.
Green is contesting the count, pointing to some irregularities in the process. Candidates and voters should go beyond that and insist on a thorough, transparent, and adversarial recount on the general principle that the current process, even if accomplished flawlessly by the procedures, is inadequate in very close elections.
Luther Weeks is executive director of CTVotersCount and the Connecticut Citizen Election Audit Coalition. The views expressed are his own and do not necessarily reflect those of other Coalition member organizations.
Recent actions by the Connecticut General Assembly to rescue the public financing of political campaigns shows that lawmakers can act fairly quickly when a shared cause, and their own interests, are at the center of the debate. Because so many candidates for the legislature are relying on public financing for their campaigns (rather than having to raise significant sums themselves), they considered it of paramount importance to keep the public program intact, despite several judicial setbacks.
A federal appeals court struck down certain parts of Connecticut campaign finance law, including a component that awarded additional public funds if a candidate's opponent opted out of the system and spent large sums on his or her campaign. The legislature passed a bill, later vetoed by Gov. Rell, to increase the grants given to gubernatorial candidates. Democrats in the House and Senate, with one exception, voted to override the Governor's veto. All Republicans opposed the override.
There are, however, more pressing issues facing the citizens of the state of Connecticut than campaign dollars. One issue is the enormous budget deficit that the legislature will have to confront after this November's election. Projections continue to show state-budget shortfalls of nearly $4 billion in each of the next two fiscal years. Connecticut also has amassed an unimaginable $60 billion in unfunded liabilities for state employee health and retirement benefits, and other costs.
The first major feature of Obama Care is being launched, high-risk health insurance pools, which cover citizens previously denied insurance due to prior conditions.
Congratulations, Republicans!
Yes, Republicans, because expansion of high-risk health insurance pools was the central element of the GOP's common-sense alternative to the grandiosity of Obama Care, aka the Affordable Care Act (ACA).
This past Tuesday we learned that Connecticut was once again shut out of the federal Race to the Top competition. While this news was disappointing, it was not wholly surprising - we were starting from way behind, and as much progress as Connecticut made with its reform legislation this year, we already knew that a number of states had pushed further with their own reforms.
Now that we are out of the running, some are tempted to offer up sour grapes, questioning the fairness of the competition, or even the premise of competitive federal funding itself. This is misguided; we lost this competition fair and square.
Best state pension system reform: Get rid of it - Chris Powell, Journal Inquirer
No campaign bucks for unopposed pols - The Day
Blumenthal needs more than a rising dead wrestler toll - David Collins, The Day
Respecting the hard-won right to vote - Hartford Courant
State needs to rethink education spending - Norwich Bulletin
A victory for decency - Connecticut Post
Mr. McHugh tells Mr. Hogan 'No' - Hartford Courant
One house is enough for UConn president - New Haven Register
Administrative costs choking universities - Scott Whipple, The New Britain Herald
Deals for friends? UConn deserves better from boss - Kevin Rennie, Hartford Courant
Bullying her way into the big ring - Keith Burris, Middletown Press
Base-saving lesson - The Day
Workplace salairies: At last, women on top - Belinda Luscombe, Time
Another Labor Day, little labor cheer - Diana Furchtgott-Roth, RealClearMarkets
Seven myths that cloud immigration debate - Darrell M. West, Brookings
Sarah's amazing race - Gail Collins, New York Times
Supreme Court, Congress need new rules for GPS searches - The Boston Globe
California budget mess a comedy, or a tragedy? - Steven Greenhut, Orange County Register
Tax cuts that make a difference - David Leonhardt, New York Times
'Clunkers,' a classic government folly - Jeff Jacoby, Boston Globe
A deserted feeling in working-class America - Harold Meyerson (#48), The Washington Post
Oxford Dictionary 3rd Edition.com? - The New York Times
Government pay: And now for the really bad news - John Tamny, Forbes
The housing market: What's ahead? - John Curran, Time
Not so easy, is it? John Dickerson, Slate