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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
04.11.2008
Trouble in the Commonwealth

WASHINGTON, DC--It appears Virginia's electoral debacle is upon is.

The vigilant folks here at Election Protection headquarters are telling us that large numbers of Virginia voters have been turned away from the polls this morning. Several precincts opened late and quickly had ballot shortages. At some, not all the machines were working; at others, none of them were working. The group's legal volunteers are learning more by the minute as calls come in from voters--so take this all with a grain of salt for now--but word here is that more than a dozen precincts have been experiencing serious problems in the Commonwealth. The number of voters affected, according to a group spokesman, is "significant."

More than a thousand frustrated Virginians have called to complain this morning. One widely reported blunder: Workers at some of the state's malfunctioning precincts have been giving cleanly registered voters provisional ballots instead of paper ballots, most likely because they ran out of the paper ones. (Provisional ballots are meant for voters whose eligibility has been called into question.) "Over the last hour, we're continuing to get these problems in Virginia," says Jon Greenbaum, the coalition's legal director. And then there's this, from a Rock the Vote rep: The polling precinct for Virginia Tech students in Blacksburg was moved to a church that sits on an unmarked road six miles off campus. Better carpool, Hokies.

The problems in Virginia should come as no surprise. The swing state added half a million voters to the rolls since '04, and the legal tussling was already underway in Richmond before this morning. Claiming the state wasn't prepared for the onslaught of voters, the NAACP had requested last week that polling hours be extended, more paper ballots be issued, and polling machinery be moved between precincts as necessary. A federal judge denied that request yesterday.

In Philly and Pittsburgh, callers are grumbling about busted voting machines, saying they were forced to cast provisional ballots like their counterparts in Virginia. As a spokesman here put it, "There are all these new battlegrounds that weren't ready for the stresses." And of course, let's not forget the perennial clusterf** that is Florida. In Hillsborough County, there are reports of optical-scan voter machines on the fritz. In Broward County, voters are complaining that they never received their absentee ballots.

And it's not even lunchtime yet.

--Dave Jamieson

Posted: Tuesday, November 04, 2008 12:04 PM with 8 comment(s)

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janus said:

In my little corner of Northern VA, things ran smoothly, if not as eloquently as at Rhubarbs' polling place. We had 400-500 people lined up before the polls opened; there was cheering as they opened the doors. I was around 150th in line, and it took me about 50 minutes to get from the front door to returning my voteing machine activation card.

It was rather quiet, overall, but satisfying.

November 4, 2008 12:15 PM

dubyadoubte said:

And in my quiet little corner of Virginia - Spotsylvania (which surpisingly is considered part of the greater DC metro area, despite being 60 miles south), things went smoothly.  There were about 100 people in line when the polls opened promptly at  6 am.  There were 4 touch screen machines running smoothly. With no ballot initiatives or bond issues to ponder - just Presidential  Senate, and House races, voting went quickly.  I was in and out in 30 minutes.

Of course, I ive in the sticks.

November 4, 2008 12:47 PM

ilnoca said:

It has been a little bumpy here, but nothing like the problems described above.

November 4, 2008 1:51 PM

The Plank said:

WASHINGTON, D.C.--Herewith a partial accounting of (unsubstantiated) chaos at the polls, as reported

November 4, 2008 2:48 PM

tec619 said:

dubyadoubte and ilnoca:

Because you two probably live either Arlington, Alexandria Fairfax counties (Democratic-run, good-government juristictions all) I wouldn't have expected major problems. (I'm from the good-government, Democratic, Maryland suburbs and voted absentee.) However, I'd like to know, why other Virginia jurisdictions are expereincing major problems. After all, Virginia governor Tim Kaine, and early Obama supporter, is a Democrat.

Is an elected official in charge of VA's state election board? And is he/she a Republican? Or, is the problem (purposeful) ineptitude by local election officials?

November 4, 2008 3:39 PM

RobtlFlax said:

The election day problems were grossly exagerated.  Virginia went blue big time.

November 5, 2008 2:23 PM

jemenake said:

At my polling place in a nice, white, affluent part of California, there was only one person in front of me when I got to my polling place... and that was because he was lost and was asking directions to his proper polling place. And then I go to work and see photos of hundreds of african-americans in lines waiting to vote.... and it just makes me want to throw something.

It's not voter "intimidation", but it's definitely voter discouragement... and I've not seen anybody even try to argue that this isn't yet another case of the affluent having an easier time casting their vote than the poor.

I'd like to see some federal laws which could hold state secretaries accountable for this kind of careless allocation of polling resources. What I have in mind is actual prison time if the *differences* in average wait times at various polling places exceeds some limit. For example... average the wait times of the 5% of the polling places reporting the lowest "longest wait of the day" and also average the times of the 5% with the *highest* "longest wait of the day". And if the lowest wait is less than 1/4 of the highest wait, then somebody's head is going to be on a stick.

November 5, 2008 6:07 PM

gnathan said:

Given the fiascos that occur every four years, I suggest that the US elections should be federalized. I'm an American living in Canada and all federal elections here are conducted by Elections Canada, a non-partisan organization. It took me no more than five minutes to vote at a polling place. The same procedure is followed throughout the country, using good old-fashioned paper ballots. Returns were in in under an hour. I realize that it would be difficult to federalize US elections, but at least an organization similar to an Elections Canada Board might be mandated for each state. Or a universal mail-in voting system could be instituted. I realize that the states are a law unto themselves (and even parts of states have this status) which makes reform very difficult.

November 7, 2008 2:15 AM