AUDIT USA Americans United for Democracy, Integrity and Transparency in Elections
  • Elections belong to the people
  • Ballot Images Project
    • Project Overview
    • Understanding Ballot Images and Related Documents
    • Get Involved
    • North Carolina Voting Systems
    • Legal Action
    • For Candidates and Campaign Leaders
    • States/Counties that Use Ballot Images from Paper Ballots
    • Documentation and Manuals for ES&S DS850’s and DS200’s
  • About
    • About AUDIT Elections USA
    • Our Team
  • Media
    • Media Inquiries
    • News
    • Archive
  • Blog
  • Donate
  • Contact
  • Elections belong to the people
  • Ballot Images Project
    • Project Overview
    • Understanding Ballot Images and Related Documents
    • Get Involved
    • North Carolina Voting Systems
    • Legal Action
    • For Candidates and Campaign Leaders
    • States/Counties that Use Ballot Images from Paper Ballots
    • Documentation and Manuals for ES&S DS850’s and DS200’s
  • About
    • About AUDIT Elections USA
    • Our Team
  • Media
    • Media Inquiries
    • News
    • Archive
  • Blog
  • Donate
  • Contact
October 24, 2018  |  By John Brakey In News

Herman’s taking a picture of your ballot

Volusia County residents casting votes in the Tuesday, Nov. 6, election might be surprised to learn that their paper ballots won’t be counted. Not directly, anyway.

Write-ins challenge both humans and the robot overlord vote-tabulators.“Some people don’t understand write-ins,” Volusia County Supervisor of Elections Lisa Lewis said.On some races, voters find a bubble on the left on the ballot, with a blank where a candidate’s name can be written.There are write-in blanks this year, for example, in the races for U.S. senator, governor and chief financial officer. Two important rules, though: Handwritten votes count only if the name you write is the name of a qualified write-in candidate. Also, be sure to fill in the write-in bubble.The seven votes for ever-popular Mickey Mouse in the 2018 primary for Volusia County council member at-large were always doomed to fail. Likewise, the 100-plus voters who filled in the oval for a write-in vote but didn’t write in a name had little effect. Ben Franklin and Evel Knievel never had a chance in that primary, not least because they are dead. Pam Bondi, Donald Trump, Jeb Bush and Elon Musk — whose names were also written in on actual Volusia County ballots — are presumably a little busy. “Republican” and “At Large” would be odd names for actual humans. And “no-one,” “neither,” “anybody else,” “none” and “no vote” are all votes, just ineffective ones.

There was a legitimate write-in candidate in the County Council at-large primary, who registered as a candidate before the election: John Casaburro. A total of 143 voters — among the 104,604 who cast ballots in the at-large race, including 616 write-ins — managed to write in Casaburro’s name and spell it close enough to correctly for their votes to count. “The most I’ve ever seen for a write-in candidate in Volusia,” Lewis said.

Read More

Please share
Previous StoryAUDIT USA Replies to ‘Cease and Desist’ Letter from ES&S
Next StoryHere’s How the Country Could Actually Secure Our Elections If Politicians Actually Cared to Try

Related Articles

  • North Carolina Faced with Unverifiable Elections
  • California to Counties: Preserve All Ballot Images
    California To County Election Officials: You Must Preserve Digital Ballot Images from Voting Machines

Leave your comment Cancel Reply

(will not be shared)

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Search This Site

Categories

Stay Connected with AUDIT-USA

Donate to Support AUDIT-USA

Blog Calendar

October 2018
M T W T F S S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  
« May   Nov »

Recent Posts

  • North Carolina Faced with Unverifiable Elections
  • California To County Election Officials: You Must Preserve Digital Ballot Images from Voting Machines
  • Government Technology: Florida’s Election Hardware Troubles Are Nothing New
  • BREAKING NEWS: TRANSPARENCY ADVOCATES SCORE VICTORY IN FLORIDA
  • Here’s How the Country Could Actually Secure Our Elections If Politicians Actually Cared to Try
  • Home
  • Get Involved
  • Donate
  • Blog
  • Media Inquiries
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms

Copyright ©2018-19 AUDIT-USA. All Rights Reserved

en_USEnglish
en_USEnglish