Chattanooga Times Free Press

Georgia’s touchscree­n voting system survives court challenge

- BY MARK NIESSE

ATLANTA — A federal judge has once again denied an effort to throw out Georgia’s touchscree­n voting computers because of election security concerns. Her decision came late Sunday, just hours before the start of early voting.

U. S. District Judge Amy Totenberg ruled against switching the state to paper ballots filled out by hand.

She wrote that it was too late to make such a sweeping change that would disrupt the election as tens of thousands of voters are expected to go the polls.

“The capacity of county election systems and poll workers, much less the Secretary of State’s Office, to turn on a dime and switch to a full-scale handmarked paper ballot system is contradict­ed by the entire messy electoral record of the past years,” Totenberg wrote in a 147- page order. “Implementa­tion of such a sudden systemic change under these circumstan­ces cannot but cause voter confusion and some real measure of electoral disruption.”

Georgia’s new $ 104 million voting system adds paper ballots to the voting process for the first time in 18 years. Voters will make their choices on touchscree­ns connected to printers that will produce paper ballots.

Totenberg criticized state election officials for problems with voting equipment during this year’s primary elections but acknowledg­ed that the U.S. Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasized that courts must exercise restraint in changing procedures near an election.

Totenberg did grant some relief to the plaintiffs, however, to help ensure that partially marked ballot ovals could be counted by scanning machines.

She directed election officials to find a way to review ballot images to ensure that voting scanner software isn’t overlookin­g votes. Totenberg ordered a resolution to be developed and put in place for elections after expected January 2021 runoffs for U.S. Senate.

The plaintiffs, including several Georgia voters and an election security group, have argued in the three-year-old case that voters can’t be confident their votes are accurately counted. The lawsuit attempted to make the case that electronic voting is inherently vulnerable to hacking, tampering or programmin­g errors.

“There is no doubt that the system is unsafe, and all the evidence points to it. But the court feels that the state cannot manage a quick change to handmarked ballots,” Marilyn Marks of the Coalition for Good Governance, a plaintiff in the lawsuit, wrote on Twitter.

Their case was bolstered by the recent revelation that a software problem caused a column of U.S. Senate candidates to disappear in rare situations after voters increased the type size on voting computers.

State election officials say they’ve fixed the problem by installing upgraded software on the state’s 34,000 touchscree­ns. The U. S. Election Assistance Commission approved the change Friday.

Attorneys for the state say there’s no evidence that Georgia’s voting computers, old and new, were ever compromise­d. Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger has said voting is safe, and the real threat is activist lawsuits that undermine public confidence in elections.

Totenberg cited the movie “Groundhog Day” in her ruling, the fourth time she has rejected attempts to replace touchscree­ns with hand-marked paper ballots.

She warned that the same questions about security of voting machines could arise again.

In a ruling last year, she criticized Georgia’s old voting system and required it to be replaced for this year’s presidenti­al election, as state legislator­s and election officials had previously planned.

But she has granted other relief to plaintiffs concerned about technical problems at the polls.

Totenberg ruled last month that paper backups of voter registrati­on records and absentee voting informatio­n must be available at every Georgia polling place, a backup in case voter check-in computers fail.

The secretary of state’s office has appealed that decision to the 11th U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals, arguing it will create a burden on stressed election officials preparing for a high-turnout election, with a total of 5 million voters expected to participat­e.

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