Elections State Government

Debra Bowen’s Big, Bad-Ass, Fabulously Gutsy Choice (UPDATED)

debrabowen-2.gif

Last year, a lot of California residents—myself among them— voted for Debra Bowen for Secretary of State
for one central reason, and one reason only: she promised to take a long, hard look at the safety and efficacy of the various kinds of electronic voting machines being used—or slated for use—in California’s counties. These were all the machines that then, Secretary of State, Bruce McPherson had already certified—over the protest of activists who worried about the machines’ security. But McPherson, a likable-seeming and genial fellow, assured us they were fine and dandy and certainly not hackable, God forbid!

Bowen professed not to be so sure.
If need be, she said during her campaign, she’d decertify the things.

After Bowen was elected, a lot of us wondered rather cynically if she would really do what she promised. Or was she—as we figured was more likely the case— just blowing a bunch of campaign smoke? (Not that we don’t TRUST the word of public officials or anything.) In other words, when push came to shove, if she found the machines weren’t up to snuff, would she have the backbone to take responsibility for the huge financial hit—and the Tsunami of criticism—that pulling the machines might mean?

This past Friday night, August 3,
at exactly nine minutes to midnight, we got our answer.

Miz David, stood up to Goliath.

To have a full understanding of what occurred, let’s backtrack a little:

After being sworn into office in January of 2007
, Bowen immediately set in motion an investigation into the methods and efficacy of the way California votes.

(Here’s a link to the voting methods used county by county.)

In February, Bowen and her SoS team asked for certain pertinent pieces of information from all the companies that made the various voting contraptions used by California’s counties, so that she could do a thoroughly informed assessment. She gave the companies a deadline by which time they were supposed to fork over the info and they….
…STONEWALLED.

They were busy, they said. They were still hung over from New Year’s Eve. They’re weren’t in the mood. They had a headache. They needed to wash their hair. The dog ate their ability to find their paperwork. Debra Bowen didn’t use the right words when she asked. Whatever.

Eventually, after much persistent nudging and a teensy bit of threatening,
Bowen got the required information from three companies, Diebold Election Systems, Hart InterCivic and Sequoia Voting Systems.

A fourth company, Elections Systems & Software—which makes the Inkavote system used in LA County, plus another system used in 10 California counties—still dragged their corporate feet. (They finally provided the info in late June.)

Nonetheless, in early March, Bowen triggered what she described as a “top-to-bottom” review of the voting systems with the info she had. She requested that teams of researchers be assembled by the University of California to take a look at the machines to determine if they could reliably safeguard the integrity of the votes cast by the citizens of the State of California.

For the next two months, the teams did just that. They evaluated the security, accessibility and manufacturer documentation of various voting machines. In the case of each type of machine, a “red team” of “penetration testers” tried to hack into the voting systems to see if they could disrupt an election or alter the results. Another team examined the source code to the machines.

On July 27, Bowen released the results of the study.

The results came down to this: Question: Were the machines secure? Answer: A big fat NO. Hackers hacked into all of ’em with no problem.

Here are a few of the details as reported by the Sacramento Bee.

Teams of hackers, led by computer scientists at UC Davis and UC Berkeley, determined that the machines are vulnerable to various levels of security breaches ranging from using small mechanical tools to break into a voting machine to deploying a computer virus to change a vote tally.

Matthew Bishop, a UC Davis researcher who led the “Red Team”
that hacked into the machines, testified Monday at a hearing that his researchers were able to change vote totals and override the software on electronic voting machines.

A report released Thursday by UC Berkeley researcher David Wagner determined that hackers could install viruses that spread throughout a county’s voting network when ballots are being tabulated by a central computer.

Critics assailed the teams’ results saying:

the tests were unrealistic because Bowen did not have the computer scientists consider the layers of security deployed by local officials on Election Day. Voting machine companies also took issue with the fact that Bowen gave researchers complete access to proprietary cards and codes that would otherwise have to be stolen from elections offices.


Oh. Right. Like that could never happen.

Bowen now had a hardcore, damned-if-you-do-damned-if-you-don’t choice to make: Given the results of the reports, should she decertify the machines, which meant costing a bunch of California counties a whole lot of money? Or should she avoid the ghastly extra cost and inconvenience and try to make do with the existing machines using some kind of temporary band aid fixes—in other words, the engineering equivalent of duct tape and bailing wire.

State of California regulations say that the Secretary of State
must give counties at least six months’ notice if machines are to be decertified. That meant Bowen had until midnight on Friday, August 3, to make up her mind.

Brad Friedman, of the California-located Texas-located BradBlog —-who has been one of the best of the online commentators on this issue—was live blogging the whole California drama that, eventually came down to an all day vigil on Friday that stretched into the night, while reporters and advocates waited for Bowen to hold her press conference and say what the hell she was going to do.

At first, reporters were told that there would be an announcement
before the close of the biz day on Friday. But five o’clock came and went with no word. In the meantime, Friedman—who was not in Sacramento, but was blogging from Texas—sent increasingly fatigued and funny updates, like this one:

By the way, while we’re waiting — and as I am currently parked literally minutes from the main headquarters of Diebold Election Systems, Inc., in Plano, TX — feel free to check out their main web page. I don’t know about other browsers, but using Firefox, all kinds of HTML code is sticking out that shouldn’t be visible. These jackasses can’t even code a webpage and we’re relying on them to code our elections?! Oh, please someone save me…

[TECH NOTE: If you check the Diebold web page using Internet Explorer , and then check it again using Firefox, you’ll see what Brad means. The Diebold idiots checked their code to see if it ran on I.E., but not on Firefox (nevermind that the latter has nearly 19 percent of the browser market in the U.S., 29 percent in Europe, mutter, mutter, mutter.) In short, this should not be viewed as a confidence boosting sign.]

The hours ticked by. Finally, another announcement-about-the-announcement came: AT 11:45 pm, Friday night, fifteen minutes before midnight—the drop-dead cut-off point for any kind of decertification—Bowen would hold a press conference to tell everyone what she’d decided.

She finally came out to the microphone at nine minutes to midnight.
(And she was wearing a very nice claret-colored blazer, I must say.) A very tired Bowen declared that she was going to decertify the voting machines used in 39 counties. One of them was Los Angeles County’s InkaVote system. If the various manufacturers hit certain marks, the machines would be recertified in time for the February primary elections, she said. Bowen also laid down a list of new security protections for upcoming elections. For instance, no more taking machines home for “sleep overs.
Here’s Bowen’s official announcement.

The New York Times summarizes Bowen’s actions in simple terms:

Ms. Bowen took her toughest action against touch-screen machines, in which a voter’s ballot is generated by a computer. She said the machines made by Diebold Election Systems and Sequoia Voting Systems could be used only in early voting and to meet voting-access requirements for the disabled.

Another touch-screen model, made by Hart InterCivic, can be used more broadly, she said. But all three of the systems can be used only under rigorous security procedures, including audits of the election results.

A lot of officials —including the Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder, a person named Conny McCormack— immediately screamed bloody murder saying that Bowen is creating an unnecessary panic.

News flash, dudes. We were already panicked before she ever got there. You don’t seem to get it. That’s why Bowen was elected—even though she had a much smaller campaign budget than McPherson. We wanted her to DO SOMETHING to clear up the panic.

Certain critics said that Bowen’s decision was all about politics. (In Sunday’s paper, the LA Times’ Joel Rubin has a nicely reported piece disabusing that view.)

And, speaking of politics, there has been an unsettling trend of late, in which elections officials seem to be anything but politics free, as the NY Times notes here quite succinctly.

Meanwhile, other states are using Bowen’s decision as a cue to reexamine their own voting systems—or in some cases, to stay with what they’ve got..

And, not surprisingly, the criticism continues.

Journalists, desperate to get contrary voices, have found outlier researchers who say things like: Even paper ballots aren’t safe. (And, I’m not kidding about this.) Somebody could stuff a lit cigarette into the ballot box and burn up all the votes.

Well, yes, of course. There is no perfection. Never has been. There will always be people who will try their damndest to illegally influence elections. But, at least Debra Bowen is one state official who seems to be taking genuine steps to guard against it.

************************************************************************************

UPDATE: Smart and alert WLA commenter, “Listener on the Sidelines,” has pointed out that the next fun-filled voting-related…uh….challenge on California’s horizon is this charming initiative called the “Presidential Election Reform Act.” The New Yorker’s Hendrik Hertzberg calls it accurately “an audacious power play packaged as a step forward for democratic fairness.” I STRONGLY recommend reading Hertzberg’s piece called VOTESCAM on this political-operative-created initiative that—if the California electorate doesn’t snap itself awake and comprehend its implications—could easily pass.

21 Comments

  • Gosh. Good for Debra Bowen. Way to go!

    And, then you also have California Initiative No. 07-0032 to look forward to, right? None other than the one, the only, earned-his-freshman-beanine blogging – Hendrik Hertzberg wrote about it here: http://tinyurl.com/2ac6ua .

    Got to keep track of California, we’re not that far away and some real skunks, er, winners seem to drift our way from there. Any time you all want Douglas Bruce back, just let us know.

  • If only she cared about stopping illegal aliens and dead people from voting for Democrats. I sense a lot more fraud from that area.

  • Yeah woody, dead people voting for those evil Democrats is a much bigger problem than vote-rigging/sabotage.

    Research the vote in Ohio in the 2004 election. Ken Blackwell. Warren county, if you care anything about democracy in the homeland.

  • “If only she cared about stopping illegal aliens and dead people from voting for Democrats. I sense a lot more fraud from that area.” — Woody.

    Baloney. Voter fraud is about 5 votes per precinct, tops. Electon fraud is typically 5% or more.

  • 5% can make or break many elections. Is voter fraud that high? I wouldn’t be surprised, with it taking upto a year to record a death or someone moving.

  • “I sense a lot more fraud from that area.” — Woody.

    Is that like how George Bush “sensed” all them WMDs in Iraq?

    Kinda mystical like?

  • Let’s just say that I know of multiple elections where the Democrats outright stole the elections: where people voted in alphabetical order and all for the Democrats, where a nursing home of Alzheimer’s patients cast solid votes for a Democrat, where neighborhoods wiped out with freeway construction still voted even though they had relocated, where dead voters rose from the grave to vote for Democrats (maybe the Immaculate Election?), etc. Democrats are so sure of the righteousness of their causes that they consider any dirty tactic to get elected as noble.

    My ability to “sense” things, however, is not as great as “Peace Patriot’s” (a name likely of contradictions) ability to close his eyes to reality and fraud. Rep. Snachez clearly was initially elected with a margin provided by illegal alien voters. Did that bother you? Isn’t it funny that Left-wingers can relate everything to Iraq–from fallen bridges to California vote fraud.

    Jaded, get over it. Bush won Wisconsin in both of the Presidential elections, yet the Democrats managed to outright steal it with fraud. Change that and Bush still wins. Democrats also stole the Washington state governor’s race with more votes than registered voters–after repeated recounts for “missing votes” and rulings by Democratic judges.

    Jimbo, what is the distinction between voter fraud and election fruad? Does the Democrats bussing a load of illegal immigrants to the polls only count as the first but not the second?

    And, like Maggie said, 5% fraud is pretty high for anyone to casually accept given the small margins of most elections. However, the problems have been going on long before the current voting machines. They represent a distraction–not the main problem which the Democrats do not want investigated.

  • Celeste: (And she was wearing a very nice claret-colored blazer, I must say.)

    Since it has become a popular talking point by the media to identify Democratic females, e.g. Hillary Clinton, as women (something often hard to do), could you discuss Ms. Bowen’s cleavage, too?

    Oh, I see that the liberal press is now saying that O’bama is “muscular.” Let’s hope that they don’t start speculating about the size of his…well, let’s leave it there.

    Just report the news without going into fashion statements.

  • Woody, that last comment is breathtakingly crude and beneath you. Further, you took an offense and raised it by an order of magnitude. Your frustration may need expression, but not this way.

  • LotS, it wasn’t I who started this whole thing about cleavage. The liberal press started making a big deal of it when someone implied that HRC was acting like a man.

    LINK: The US debates Hillary’s cleavage

    As O’Bama goes, the press has discussed his “muscle” lately. I just implied that there may be no limit to defining the god or goddess comparisons of Democratic candidates.

  • Heck, Woody, I’m an old ex-fashion editor. (I worked for various women’s magazines when I was in my 20’s—Seventeen, Glamour, that sort of thing.)

    So, for me, although politics and policy issues are important and everything—in the end, it’s all about the accessories.

    (And I really did like the claret blazer.)

    About Barak, yeah, now that you mention it he is kinda buff. But I honestly didn’t see a legitimate way of working that into a story about California’s voting methods.

  • BTW, Brad Friedman and The Brad Blog are California based, not Texas based. That said, he has been traveling recently, and that’s the reason his recent posts have been from Texas.

  • YO’, DEBRA!! I’ve been working as a Polling Center Inspector (the guy with the roster) in South Pasadena/Pasadena/Altadena for about 10-12 years and from my experience, sadly, it’s the voter who doesn’t pay attention to the e-z to follow instructions that creates smudged ink-dots, “pregnant” chads and an unpleasant election experience for the other voters who are waiting for me to fix things. (My Swiss Army penknife has saved many a ballot AND voting machine.) In my precincts, the old-fashioned stylus-stabbing system really worked well and the Inkavote system has also been successful. I trust the electronic machines about a far as I can throw a Steinway (full or baby). And, that whole 2000 mess in Florida/Ohio was a “smoke & mirrors” act standing on the shoulders and yet far beyond the talents of Donald Segretti. Anyway, when you vote, as in life, if you don’t follow instructions, you get what you get – eight years of Bush. Ewwww!

  • Thanks, DB. I’ll fix that.

    Hey, Jon. Glad to know that our rampant paranoia about those electronic contraptions is matched by your more knowledge-based suspicions.

    We used the punch thingy’s in Topanga for years, and I’m sure there were loads of hanging chads we knew nothing about. Of course, after 2000 we each took every precaution short of stabbing the things out with a Bowie knife.

  • Celeste, go with Mr. Peabody and Sherman in the Way-back Machine to 1962, when the mechanical voting machines were used. You flipped the switch by the name of the candidates for whom you wanted to vote or just flipped one switch at the top of the column to vote for everyone within your party. When finished, you cast your vote with another switch, which rolled the numbers on the counters, reset the voting switches, and opened the curtains. There were no receipts or paper proofs of your vote, and the votes were recorded on a mechanical tabulator, which had the reliability of a Ford automobile. Don’t think that problems with voting machines began in Florida with stupid Democratic voters. The problems with voting machines have always been there. It’s just popular to make political points over the issue today.

  • Celeste: “About Barak, yeah, now that you mention it he is kinda buff. But I honestly didn’t see a legitimate way of working that into a story about California’s voting methods.”

    Does that mean that you thought about trying to figure a way to do it? 😉

Leave a Comment