Rome News-Tribune

Ga. buys new voting machines amid challenges

- By Ben Nadler

ATLANTA — Despite legal challenges, Georgia is moving ahead with the purchase of a new $106 million voting system with touchscree­n computers that print a paper record, the secretary of state announced Monday.

The new machines will replace Georgia’s current touchscree­n voting machines, which have been in use since 2002 and offer no verifiable paper trail.

Cybersecur­ity experts and election integrity activists warn that the new machines suffer from many of the same problems as the old ones, including being vulnerable to hacking, and advocate for a system using hand marked paper ballots.

The purchase comes months after Republican Gov. Brian Kemp won a highly contentiou­s race against Democrat Stacey Abrams, and as the state faces several lawsuits over its handling of elections.

In one, U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg is weighing whether to order the state to immediatel­y abandon its outdated voting machines in favor of an interim solution for this fall’s special and municipal elections.

Totenberg said the state had allowed its voting system to become “way too old and archaic” and now has a deep hole to dig out of to ensure that the constituti­onal right to vote is protected.

Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger’s office says the new machines will be in place for Georgia’s presidenti­al primaries on March 24, leaving officials roughly eight months to fully implement the system throughout 159 counties. Raffensper­ger selected Dominion Voting Systems as the state’s new vendor after a competitiv­e bidding process. Legislatio­n passed by the Georgia General Assembly this year and signed into law by Kemp laid out specificat­ions. It called for a system where voters make their selections on an electronic touchscree­n, called a ballot marking device, which prints a paper record of a voter’s selections. The voter can then review their selections on the printout before it is scanned and tabulated.

Wenke Lee unsuccessf­ully lobbied for a system using hand marked paper ballots instead. He’s a professor of computer science at Georgia Tech and was the lone cyber expert on the panel that provided recommenda­tions to the legislatur­e. He argues that ballot marking devices are susceptibl­e to hacking and that voters aren’t capable of — and likely won’t take the time to — properly review their paper printout for errors.

“It’s not the outcome I was hoping for,” Lee said in a recent interview. “With the way technology keeps changing, keeps improving, and also the threat landscape keeps changing, I think it’s a pretty dumb idea to sink a huge amount of money into a system and then be stuck with it for like 15 years.”

Several county elections officials testified this year that the new machines would be the easiest to train for and administer, because they are similar to the current touchscree­ns. The new voting machines can also accommodat­e all Georgians, including those with disabiliti­es, under one common system.

 ?? Ap-mike Stewart, File ?? People cast their ballots ahead of the Nov. 6, 2018, general election at Jim Miller Park, in Marietta. A federal judge is set to hear arguments Thursday in a lawsuit challengin­g Georgia’s outdated voting machines.
Ap-mike Stewart, File People cast their ballots ahead of the Nov. 6, 2018, general election at Jim Miller Park, in Marietta. A federal judge is set to hear arguments Thursday in a lawsuit challengin­g Georgia’s outdated voting machines.

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