Las Vegas Review-Journal

Midterms reveal problems with aging machines

Reports poured in about failing voting equipment

- By Christina A. Cassidy and Michel Liedtke The Associated Press

ATLANTA — Election experts have long warned about the nation’s aging fleet of voting equipment. This week’s elections underscore­d just how badly upgrades are needed.

Across the country, reports poured in Tuesday amid heavy voter turnout of equipment failing or malfunctio­ning, triggering frustratio­n among voters and long lines at polling places.

Scanners used to record ballots broke down in New York City. Voting machines stalled or stopped working in Detroit. Electronic poll books used to check in voters failed in Georgia. Machines failed to read ballots in Wake County, North Carolina, as officials blamed humidity and lengthy ballots.

Those problems followed a busy early voting period that revealed other concerns, including machines that altered voters’ choices in Texas, North Carolina and Georgia.

Voting experts had hoped the threat of foreign government­s med- dling in U.S. elections, raised in 2016 when Russia targeted state election systems, would prompt action to upgrade the machinery that underpins U.S. elections.

But two years before the 2020 presidenti­al election, 41 states are still using machines that were manufactur­ed more than a decade ago and a dozen states are using at least some electronic machines that produce no paper trail, which can be used to settle a disputed outcome. Just three states require the type of rigorous audit backed by cybersecur­ity experts.

Some of the voting machines in use Tuesday were built before Apple released the first iphone in 2007, while other equipment has become so obsolete that election workers have been forced to search on ebay for replacemen­t parts.

In some cases, local election offices have no technician­s who are trained to repair their machines when something goes wrong. Some even run on Windows operating systems that Microsoft no longer supports.

“You can’t run democracy on the cheap,” said Jenny Flanagan, vice president for state operations with Common Cause. “We have to invest in our democracy to make our elections work.”

 ?? Brad Lander ?? The Associated Press People stand in numerous lines as they wait to vote Tuesday at Kingsboro Temple Seventh-day Adventist Church in the Brooklyn borough of New York. By the time New York City Councilman Brad Lander got to vote, all four of the scanners in the precinct were broken.
Brad Lander The Associated Press People stand in numerous lines as they wait to vote Tuesday at Kingsboro Temple Seventh-day Adventist Church in the Brooklyn borough of New York. By the time New York City Councilman Brad Lander got to vote, all four of the scanners in the precinct were broken.

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