Could
US Elections Be Stolen? Election Integrity Activists Say Yes
‘If
it’s a close election, the cheaters are going to win,’ says Mark
Crispin Miller, a professor of media studies who’s spent years
combing through U.S. election results for evidence of electronic
voting machine fraud.
By
Kit O'Connell
8
November, 2016
AUSTIN,
Texas — Election fraud is a dangerously real possibility
in the United States, but Donald Trump is wrong about how elections
could be rigged under the current system.
The Republican
nominee has warned his supporters that
the election could be rigged against him, and there have already been
reports of Trump
supporters with guns at polling places intimidating
voters.
However,
Mark Crispin Miller, a self-described “election integrity
activist,” dismissed Trump’s claims.
“It’s
basically impossible to vote ten times or fifteen times,” said the
professor of media studies at New York University who has spent more
than a decade studying election results.
“Under
current electronic voting systems, it’s no longer really possible …
to get a bunch of immigrants out there to stuff the ballot box. With
a computerized system, it’s extremely difficult for many people to
vote even one time, much less ten or fifteen.”
Only a
couple of incidents of voter fraud or
vote tampering have been found during this election, including the
case of an Iowa woman who was arrested after she tried
to vote multiple times for Trump,
but they were quickly noticed by authorities.
“Republicans
commit that crime as often as Democrats, as it happens,” Miller
said. He explained that this type of voter fraud happens so rarely,
and is ultimately so ineffective, that it’s almost a myth. Numerous
studies have found that voter fraud,
as Trump imagines it, is essentially nonexistent.
However,
as Miller noted, that doesn’t mean American democracy is secure and
that voters’ ballots are being properly counted.
‘The attack on democracy has become much more sophisticated’
A
vote counter inserts a tally card from an electronic voting machine
into a card readers as they count votes at the Lake County
Government Center in Crown Point, Ind., Nov. 4, 2008.
Most
voters use electronic voting machines to cast their ballots, though,
in a few smaller districts, they may cast paper ballots that are then
counted with computerized devices. But electronic voting machines
lack a paper trail that could be used to verify that votes are being
counted properly, and even the optical scanners used to count paper
ballots can be tampered with, Miller warned.
Miller
said he believes that rigged electronic voting machines may already
have been used to steal elections.
“I’ve
been concerned about the vulnerability of our elections since 2000
because of the rising use of computerized voting and vote counting
machinery,” Miller explained.
In
2005, he published “Fooled Again,” which documented evidence that
the Republicans had used rigged electronic voting machines to tilt
the 2004 election in favor of George W. Bush, and against Democratic
nominee John Kerry.
In
2008, he edited “Loser Take All,” a follow-up volume containing
further evidence of election rigging through electronic voting which
was submitted by other electoral integrity activists and scholars.
Miller summarized his findings to MintPress:
“The
use of electronic voting machines and optical scanners to count votes
is every bit as threatening to electoral democracy for all as the old
poll taxes and literacy tests. The attack on democracy has become
much more sophisticated. It’s a stealth attack, very often.”
Key
evidence often comes in the form of comparing exit polls with
official election day results. Without a paper trail, this is the
only way activists like Miller can compare voters’ stated choices
to the final tally. However, some experts have warned that exit
polls themselves could be flawed,
limiting activists’ ability to definitively prove that fraud has
occurred.
While
the United States is often considered an exemplar of democracy to
which other countries should or do aspire, a 2016 study by
the Electoral
Integrity Project found
the United States trailing
behind other Western countries in multiple measurements of
the vitality of a democracy. Carried out by researchers from the
University of Sydney and Harvard University, the study examined 180
elections held between July 2012 to December 2015 in 139 countries,
and found that U.S. elections were vulnerable in multiple ways, from
the influence of money in politics to frequent and worrying voting
irregularities on Election Day.
“Americans
often express pride in their democracy, yet the results indicate that
domestic and international experts rate the U.S. elections as the
worst among all Western democracies,” Pippa
Morris noted
in a March analysis for The Conversation.
Watch “Could the 2016 Election Be Stolen with Help from Electronic Voting Machines?”
Harvey Wasserman, an Ohio-based electoral integrity activist, has also sounded the alarm about the vulnerability of electoral voting machines in a pair of books, “What Happened in Ohio: A Documentary Record of Theft and Fraud in the 2004 Election” and “The Strip & Flip Selection of 2016: Five Jim Crows & Electronic Election Theft.”
In
February, Wasserman
told Democracy Now!’s Amy Goodman that
the election is vulnerable to tampering, especially in swing states
where results will be close.
He explained:
He explained:
“About
80 percent of the vote nationally will be cast on electronic voting
machines. There is no verifiability. In six key swing states—Florida,
North Carolina, Ohio, Michigan, Iowa and Arizona—you have
Republican governors and Republican secretaries of state, and no
method of verifying the electronic vote count. At midnight or
whenever it is on election night, those two guys can go in there with
an IT person and flip the outcome of an electronically counted vote
within about 60 seconds.”
Miller
agreed that elections are most vulnerable in tight races. He
suggested that’s why the GOP has been so passionate about passing
voter ID laws and other forms of legal voter suppression.
“That’s
one of the purposes of vote suppression, is to shrink the pool of
eligible voters so the race is as close as possible, because if it’s
a close election, the cheaters are going to win,” he said.
But
he also stressed there’s evidence that Democrats have also fallen
victim to electronic voter fraud. Ultimately, though, it’s
impossible to know who is responsible for vote tampering. Among other
examples, Miller cited a
July report from Election
Justice USA,
which suggested that Bernie Sanders fell victim to electronic voter
fraud during the primaries. The report’s authors wrote:
“Available
evidence from Arizona, New York, and California suggests more than
500,000 registrations were tampered with or improperly handled. …
hundreds of thousands of voters were denied the right to vote or were
forced to vote provisionally. A quarter million or more provisional
or affidavit Democratic ballots were not counted. Available evidence
also suggests that the vast majority of suppressed voters would have
voted or tried to vote for Senator Bernie Sanders.”
‘We have to spread the word about this’
A
sales executive with Sequoia Voting Systems demonstrates inserting a
ballot into their electronic voting system in San Francisco, Dec. 5,
2007.
Miller
said his work suffers from an almost total blackout in the mainstream
media, and even independent media often refuse to report on the risks
of electronic voter fraud.
“The
strength of the taboo on this subject is really mind-boggling. The
press has always been exceedingly hostile to any discussion of this
problem, especially if it entails a focus on electronic fraud,” he
said.
“It’s
probably going to have to take some kind of near revolutionary
movement to force [the government] to make this a real functioning
electoral democracy.”
Hope
for reform isn’t totally lost, though. Rep. Hank Johnson, a
Democrat from Georgia, introduced a bill in September that
would prohibit
the government from purchasing internet-connected voting machines or
machines which lack a paper trail. The legislation was inspired in
part by lobbying from activists like Miller, working in concert with
the National
Election Defense Coalition,
which Miller highlighted as one of the few NGOS effectively targeting
the issue of election fraud.
Meanwhile,
social media allows Miller reach new audiences beyond the confines of
mainstream media. A
video he published on Friday about
the risks of a rigged election had been viewed nearly 10,000 times by
Monday night, and he hopes it will soon be seen by many more voters
as it spreads through social media shares and word of mouth.
“We
have to talk about it, we have to spread the word about this,” he
urged. “Because only once people know the scale of the problem will
there be any pressure on the parties to fix this system.”
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