October 10, 2008: Vote against Question 1
I've been hearing from people who have a lot of questions
about Ballot Question One.
There are a lot of problems with Question 1 on the
ballot. Ballot Question ONE is an open invitation to
fraud. . I can't say in strong enough terms how bad
Question One is. Here is the link to view/print out a flyer
from MD Families:
http://mdfamilies.org/election2008/question1.htm
Here is a link to their voter guides:
http://mdfamilies.org/election2008/voterguides.htm
Blair Lee
My Maryland
Maryland voters are focused on the presidential race and
on ballot Question No. 2, the constitutional amendment
legalizing slots. No one is focused on ballot Question
No. 1, the constitutional amendment removing some long held
safeguards from our elections process.
Under current state law we vote on a single day, Election
Day; we vote at a single place, our home polling place; and
we vote in person (unless we are absent or unable to vote).
In the name of convenience and expanding voter
participation, Question 1 removes each of these safeguards
as follows:
Early voting
Instead of making voters stand in long Election Day lines
let's open the polls before Election Day, too, so people can
cast their ballots over a six- or seven-day period. Sounds
great until you look at the details.
First, the cost is enormous. In this budget-cutting era
which essential public services will be sacrificed so
election judges can watch a trickle of voters cast early
ballots?
Second, no one has thought out the logistics. On Election
Day, we close schools and public buildings to provide
polling places. Are we going to close schools all week for
early voting? And where are we going to find the judges and
administrators to man the polls? If we can't find enough
personnel for one day, where are we going to find enough for
a week?
Third, the state legislature's answer is to limit the number
of early voting venues to one per every small county and two
or three per every big county. This opens the door to
political mischief such as locating the few polling places
in heavily Democratic precincts or on African-American
college campuses.
Fourth, early voting also opens the door to outright fraud.
Under our current system our votes are secured and counted
on a single evening. Over a seven-day period who is going to
guard and count the votes? The potential for tampering is
troubling.
Fifth, in the political soap opera of election campaigns
there's a lot to be said for sticking around for the last
act. Early voters may wish they waited should a
mind-changing revelation emerge in the closing days of an
election.
By the way, every study everywhere that early voting is used
shows that the number of voters does not increase. Instead,
the same number of voters simply vote over a longer period
of time.
So we're left with the convenience rationale — avoiding
those long lines — as the sole reason for early voting.
Considering the many problems early voting raises, maybe
waiting in line, like you do for concert tickets or cheaper
gas, isn't so bad.
Provisional voting
Each Maryland voter is assigned a specific polling place,
usually the one nearest your home, and that's where you must
vote. Sometimes people show up at the wrong polling place
because they've moved or are confused. In such cases they
cast a provisional paper ballot, which is held separately
and then checked against that voter's home polling place to
guard against double voting.
But if you live in Baltimore and simply show up to vote in
Bethesda because you feel like it, your ballot won't be
accepted.
However, if Question 1 passes you can vote anywhere in
Maryland you wish. Yes, the technology exists to double
check against double voting. But to me, the cost and
administrative burden on already strained elections
officials isn't worth whatever benefit "provisional voting"
provides. If you know you're going to be elsewhere in the
state on Election Day, think ahead and get an absentee
ballot.
Absentee ballots
This is the one that alarms me the most. Under current law,
a voter must individually apply for an absentee ballot and
can only vote absentee if they are absent or unable to vote
in person.
Question 1 allows absentee ballots to be handed out like
candy. Instead of each voter applying individually, anyone
can pick up an armful of ballots and head off to the nearest
nursing home, unemployment line or skid row.
Sounds farfetched? Well consider the Association of
Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN), an activist
group that's been indicted and convicted for voter
registration fraud around the nation. ACORN is active in
Maryland, too.
By lifting the absentee ballot safeguards we invite ACORN or
similar cheaters to merge phony voter registrations with
phony absentee ballots into a type of fraud that's almost
impossible to detect. There's no way to catch a registered
non-existent voter who votes with a mailed-in absentee
ballot.
America's democratic system, like its financial system,
depends on public confidence. Please don't let the reckless
deregulation that's befallen our financial system spread to
our elections system as well.
Blair Lee is CEO of the Lee
Development Group in Silver Spring and a regular commentator
for WBAL radio. His column appears Fridays in The Gazette.
His e-mail address is blair@leedg.com.
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