Monday, November 10, 2014

Why Alaska's Early Voting has Problems


The number of uncounted votes in Alaska’s tightly fought U.S. Senate race grew by 21,000 between Wednesday and Friday and more than 5,000 of those were votes that hadn’t been predicted in early accounts of the number of ballots outstanding.

After election night on Tuesday, incumbent Democratic U.S. Sen. Mark Begich trailed Republican challenger Dan Sullivan by 8,000 votes, or 3.6 percent, and both campaigns have been closely watching as state elections officials collect additional ballots cast by mail, or at more than 200 so-called “absentee in-person voting locations” around the state, where people could vote early.

More than 40,000 ballots will likely be counted starting Tuesday, though the number will probably climb even more before then.  To win, Begich would have to reverse election night trends and win a substantial majority, though his allies have pointed out that in the count following Election Day in 2008, Begich overcame a 3,000 vote deficit to Republican Ted Stevens and ultimately won by 4,000 votes.

The spike between Wednesday and Friday was a reflection of state elections officials’ new accounting for more than 13,000 provisional ballots, 2,200 absentee ballots submitted by fax, mail or email, and some 5,200 ballots cast early at the in-person absentee voting locations across the state.

The 5,200 ballots come from more than 200 early voting locations across the state, including 161 in rural Alaska, where results skewed heavily toward the incumbent Democratic candidate, Sen. Mark Begich, and where his campaign put a huge emphasis on registering and turning out voters.

More ballots are still expected from the early voting places, and those ballots are not included in state elections officials’ current totals of by-mail, by-fax or by-email absentee ballots that voters requested but haven’t yet returned. That number sits at 11,600.

Alaska Division of Elections Director Gail Fenumiai said in an email that the state does not track the number of outstanding ballots from the early voting locations, though she added that it does have procedures in place to ensure that all votes cast at the early voting locations are ultimately counted.  Fenumiai said in an email that the ballots from the early voting locations are sent in periodic batches over a 15-day voting period.

Three Alaska Native groups issued a joint statement late Thursday saying that “the election isn’t over until ‘rural Alaska sings.’ ”

Jim Lottsfeldt, an Anchorage political consultant who ran the pro-Begich Put Alaska First PAC during the election, said he’s talked to Begich, whose message about the outstanding ballots was, “The more they find, the better it is for him, mathematically.”

Vote counting will start up again Tuesday, though absentee ballots sent from outside the U.S. can be received through Nov. 19 as long as they were postmarked on Election Day.

The reason that many of the absentee votes aren't counted immediately is because state elections officials need to check them against registers used at individual precincts on Election Day, to ensure that people didn't try to vote twice.

How would you fix this problem?

Maybe it is time for secure online voting for these remote locations.










NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote!

Michael H. Drucker
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