The 2004 election may not have an asterisk next to it the way the 2000 election does, but the mechanics of our democracy remained badly flawed. From untrustworthy electronic voting machines, to partisan secretaries of state, to outrageously long lines at the polls, the election system was far from what voters are entitled to.
It's patently obvious that presidential elections, at least, should be conducted under uniform rules. Voters in Alaska and Texas should not have different levels of protection when it comes to their right to cast a ballot and have it counted. It's ridiculous that citizens who vote in one place have to show picture ID while others do not, that a person who accidentally walks into the wrong polling place can cast a provisional ballot that will be counted in one state but thrown out in another. States may have the right to set their own standards for local elections, but picking the president is a national enterprise.
This is obviously a job for Congress, and it deserves the same kind of persistent, intense lobbying effort that reformers have given the issue of campaign finance. But improvements by the states may be easier to achieve, and will clearly help prod Congress by their good example. Advocates should push every level of government to be part of the solution
It's about time we started thinking about standardizing elections for federal office. That would probably mean making federal elections a separate affair entirely from local elections (at least in some areas, others would probably just let the regulations for conducting a federal election trickle down into their local elections and thereby be able to combine the two into a single event/day). We need to establish a deep, detailed infrastructure if we are to use as complex a system as electronic voting and volunteer poll workers. The NYT goes a long way in making some necessary steps clear... I think this - the formal separation of federal elections from local elections - will not be easy to do (probably requiring a constitutional amendment) but is essential to make sure that people in one part of the country can trust the results from another part of the country (not to mention trusting the result from one's own part of the country).
The NYT is short-sighted in a couple places. Specifically (some of this is to appear in a forthcoming paper, if you'd like to know more, just ask):
No Comments/Pingbacks for this post yet...
Comments are closed for this post.
Previous post: b2evolution: How to clear evo_hitlog?Next post: Star Wars Episode III Trailer