The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Judge to rule if vote must be on paper

Lawsuit against Georgia over electronic ballots to be heard Wednesday.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

A federal judge could rule Wednesday on a far-reaching request to switch Georgia from electronic to paper ballots just eight weeks before November’s election.

Changing the state’s voting system on short notice would be a dramatic change, but concerned voters and election integrity groups say it would eliminate the possibilit­y the state’s touchscree­n machines, which lack a verifiable paper backup, could be hacked.

They’ll be in court Wednesday to ask U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg for an injunction prohibitin­g election officials from using the state’s 27,000 direct-recording electronic voting units, or DREs. Instead, voters would use pens to fill in paper ballots by hand.

Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp, the defendant in the case, strongly opposes a quick move away from the voting system in place since 2002. He said electronic voting machines are secure and that a rushed transition to paper would result in a less trustworth­y election system.

But Donna Curling, the lead plaintiff in the lawsuit, said Georgia’s electronic voting machines are inherently unsafe. If voting machines were penetrated by hackers, malicious code could rig elections, she said.

“There’s a lot wrong with the machines. They’ve been proven time and again to have security flaws that can’t be mitigated,” said Curling, a Roswell resident and member of a group called Georgians for Verified Voting. “This should have been done a long time ago.”

The judge will have to consider, among other things, fundamenta­l voting rights and the feasibilit­y of printing paper ballots for Georgia’s 6.7 million registered voters.

Kemp, who supports a transition to paper ballots in time for the 2020 presidenti­al election, said it would be irresponsi­ble to force voters into an election crisis. He warned that early-voting locations would close in Fulton County because of staffing shortages, paper ballots couldn’t be delivered in time in Cobb County and no county has budgeted for the expense statewide.

“The fact is that Georgia’s voting machines are aging, but they have never been compromise­d,” said Kemp, the Republican nominee for governor facing Democrat Stacey Abrams in November. “The other side is great at grabbing headlines, but in court, they have no evidence to substantia­te their claims.”

Georgia is one of five states that rely entirely on DRE machines without a voter-verified paper backup.

While there’s no evidence that Georgia’s voting machines have been infiltrate­d, election security advocates say there’s no way to tell. If a hacker found a way into Georgia’s election system, they could switch results without leaving a trace.

The voting system essentiall­y will be on trial during Wednesday’s hearing.

Plaintiffs intend to call several witnesses, including two professors with expertise in computer hacking, Georgia Election Director Chris Harvey and Fulton County Election Director Richard Barron. For the defense, State Election Board Chairwoman Rebecca Sullivan and former Georgia Secretary of State Cathy Cox. Kemp wasn’t on the list of potential witnesses identified in a court filing Friday.

An attorney for some of the plaintiffs, David Cross, acknowledg­ed that changing to paper ballots wouldn’t be easy, but he said it’s essential.

“I don’t see how anybody can force Georgia voters to go forward with the current system, given that the vulnerabil­ities are unrefuted,” Cross said. “No one at the end of the day will ever be able to conclude that the election results in Georgia represent the will of voters under the current system.”

Harvey, the state’s election director, warned of “drastic consequenc­es” if the state changes to paper ballots in such a short time.

Currently, less than 10 percent of voters use paper absentee ballots, and moving all voters to use paper would require millions of dollars, hastily crafted regulation­s, extensive voter education and revamped security measures, he said in a declaratio­n filed in court last month.

It would also take more time to count paper ballots and report results, a process that’s currently finished in the early-morning hours after Election Day.

“Beginning a conversion to a new statewide system less than 90 days from Election Day presents a substantia­l risk of voter confusion, disruption, increased errors at polls, increased wait times, suppressed voter turnout and potential disenfranc­hisement,” according to Harvey’s declaratio­n.

There’s no cost estimate for the expense of a rapid change to paper ballots, but Gwinnett County Elections Director Lynn Ledford estimated in court documents that it would cost roughly $1 per voter for a two-page ballot in her county.

Other states, such as Maryland and Virginia, have quickly replaced electronic voting machines with paper ballots, but not on such a broad scale or as hastily as the plaintiffs in the Georgia case are seeking.

In Maryland, the state was transition­ing to paper ballots when election officials canceled the use of touchscree­n machines for early voting before the April 2016 primary election. Maryland already had planned to use paper ballots on Election Day for the primary and general elections.

Maryland election officials changed to paper ballots early because voters said they were confused about new touchscree­n navigation, Maryland Deputy Election Administra­tor Nikki Charlson said.

“The meat of the changes had already been done. We were moving to paper ballots,” Charlson said. “That process took more than a year. Every single thing changes when you go from fully electronic to paper.”

In Virginia, the move to paper ballots began a decade before the state Board of Elections decertifie­d touchscree­n machines last year, a decision that required 23 cities and counties to acquire new voting equipment within weeks of the November election. That decision affected 140 Virginia precincts; there are 2,635 precincts in Georgia.

Still, it could be done in Georgia because each of the state’s 159 counties would be working at the same time to switch to paper, Cross said.

No matter the potential difficulti­es, one of the plaintiffs, Donna Price, said Georgia should do what it takes to make the change. She said Georgia’s voting machines can’t be trusted.

“A voting system like Georgia’s, with no paper record to audit, is like speaking your vote to a person behind a curtain and trusting that your vote is counted,” said Price, the director of Georgians for Verified Voting, who lives near Stone Mountain. “It’s best to trust but verify.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON /CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp said he supports a transition to paper ballots in time for the 2020 presidenti­al election, but doing so less than 60 days before the election is irresponsi­ble. Voting machines are secure, he said, and a rushed transition to paper would result in a less trustworth­y system.
CURTIS COMPTON /CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp said he supports a transition to paper ballots in time for the 2020 presidenti­al election, but doing so less than 60 days before the election is irresponsi­ble. Voting machines are secure, he said, and a rushed transition to paper would result in a less trustworth­y system.
 ?? REANN HUBER / REANN.HUBER@AJC.COM ?? Georgia has 6.7 million registered voters. There’s no evidence that state voting machines, in use since 2002, have been infiltrate­d, but election security advocates say there’s no way to tell.
REANN HUBER / REANN.HUBER@AJC.COM Georgia has 6.7 million registered voters. There’s no evidence that state voting machines, in use since 2002, have been infiltrate­d, but election security advocates say there’s no way to tell.

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