News

Beware the ranked choice bandwagon

WHEREAS, The Republican National Committee has unanimously opposed complicated election schemes like Ranked Choice Voting that is a clear example of the chaos being pushed on our states and territories;

Ranked choice needs to be denounced and illegal in SC as it can only be computed with machines and disenfranchises some voters.

For more on Ranked choice voting see this article: https://thenevadaglobe.com/articles/opinion-the-perils-of-ranked-choice-voting/

“Ranked-choice voting is a scam to rig elections,” Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) tweeted after results from Alaska’s special election showing Palin won Wednesday. “60% of Alaska voters voted for a Republican, but thanks to a convoluted process and ballot exhaustion—which disenfranchises voters—a Democrat ‘won.’” The Hill Sept. 1, 2022.

“It is a scam, a scheme being perpetrated especially on those who thought their votes would count. RCV solves no problem but rather creates them.” Explains why in detail here: rcvscam.com

“Ranked-Choice Voting is a Disaster” by The Foundation for Govt Accountability, read why here https://thefga.org/ranked-choice-voting-is-a-disaster/

“The bottom line is RCV is a scam that destroys integrity in elections” PrescottNews Mar 2023 https://prescottenews.com/index.php/2023/03/15/arizona-freedom-caucus-ranked-choice-voting-is-a-scam-that-destroys-integrity-in-elections/

We don’t have a verifiable paper ballot system

WHEREAS, Election experts agree that the most resilient voting systems use paper ballots, either mark

ed by hand or with an assistive device, and are verified by the voter before any means of tabulation;

Tabulation is an issue as well since many voters don’t trust the black box nature of tabulators. In SC, Article II section 1 of our constitution states that our votes shall be cast in secret but not counted in secret. The tabulators count in SECRET. Thus, hand-counting must be part of a redesign of the process.

Did you know….that in South Carolina we don’t technically have a paper ballot system that the voter can verify?

RESOLVED, The Republican National Committee boldly opposes means of voting that do not have the proper safeguards in place and are exclusively electronic and calls on every county and state in the nation to use as the default ballot systems, which are fully auditable, namely hand-marked, voter-verified paper ballots to ensure every voter is memorialized by a paper record;

Our system in South Carolina is complex, and while it states that it is a “paper ballot” system that the voter can verify, this is simply not true.  The system is not a paper ballot –it is a “coded ballot” that has barcodes at the top of the paper that the voter has no way of verifying that these codes in fact are accurate and reflect their choices. Although their choices are also printed in text, they can’t confirm that the barcodes correlate with those selections. Furthermore, in SC, Article II section 1 of our constitution states that our votes shall be cast in secret but not counted in secret. Our tabulators count in SECRET.

Problem: The bottom line is that we don’t have a voter verified paper ballot system and audits are inadequate.

Our system instead uses coded ballots. We have no idea how to interpret those codes once our finished ballot is printed out without a barcode reader.  Thus, our system is NOT auditable or voter verifiable.

Solution:  Hand-marked, hand-counted paper ballots that are fully auditable.

Bill 4259 addresses this in section 7-13-1180 which allows for hand count audits in five contested races in at least 3 precincts randomly selected and 7-13-1190 post-election audits or forensic audits by party chair or counties.

Bill 4260  establishes a pilot program for 2024 for at least 3 counties to cast votes on hand-marked paper ballots counted by hand. Ideally, at the minimum, we should allow the voter the option of a paper ballot.

Bill 4261 addresses this in section 7-3-35 as it provides for adequate audit records and verification—via publicly available Cast Vote Records and/or ballot images. Bill 3162 amends the SC code by adding Section 1625 to provide that any voting system purchased for use in South Carolina must utilize hand-marked paper ballots counted by hand

Weak standards breed a lack of trust in our voting systems Interview with Clay Parikh

In this engaging discussion Clay Parikh, who worked for 9 years in the Vote System Test Labs joins local South Carolina cyber experts to discuss the weak standards and rubber stamp certification of the electronic voting systems. The VVSG Voluntary Voting System Guidelines are also lacking. The security requirements are general and vague and the test results are normally approved regardless of test outcomes. WE are still testing to 2005 standards which were weak to begin with.

The group discuss the possibility of moving to a hand-marked hand-counted ballot system. Clay suggests that counties should have more flexibility to test different systems.

***********The computer system SC uses reads a barcode on the ballot/receipt the voter prints out and sometimes that can’t be interpreted by a bar code reader due to low dpi resolution. This leads us to question whether our tabulators let alone the voter can verify their vote.****************

We also talked specifically about the systems used in South Carolina for the 2020 and the 2022 elections (EVS 6.0.2.0 and EVS 6.1.1.0). Once a system is certified it is done until there are material changes, Thus, most of the changes regardless of their complexity are labeled as “de minimis.” The EAC willingly “buys off on this.” The EAC also gave retroactive certification post 2020 to expired VSTL lab certifications because……COVID. Why couldn’t they say that proactively? The EAC appears to cover for the labs and there is the appearance of an incestuous relationship. The progression to federalization of the elections is also a concern. For example, why are Albert sensors continuously monitoring our election machines?

Risk assessment is key here. Why aren’t the risks being properly addressed for such an important system?

There are weak standards for testing; weak tests, weak to nonexistent configuration management, and outdated software. This is a must watch if you want to know more about the security of the systems you vote on. Do you trust that your vote counted? Would you put your money in a bank with this weak of a security system with a lack of robust testing? We think not. Our vote is a form of currency too.

Electronic voting systems–The risks are real

In this 4 part series, cyber securities expert Julie Baker steps through the many vulnerabilities of the ES&S Election Management System. There is much risk embedded in these systems resulting in a loss of trust and confidence in the process. Does our vote count? How do we know if we can’t get reports to do the basic analysis required to confirm our systems have integrity? Why is there a lack of transparency with respect to our third party vendors and corporations involved in this process?

Julie has an extensive background working in Information Technology for major banks in Manhattan as well as Israel. She knows the inherent risks of computer systems like these systems used to implement elections. This is a compelling presentation not to be missed.

Part 1 Voting Machine Risks-Third Party Risk

Part 2 Can we trust our election systems?

Part 3 Machine Vulnerability Risks

Part 4 Can these machines be manipulated?

Early voting is like showing your cards to your competition in a poker game

Early voting is being pushed by political parties, candidates, and election officials in the name of “convenience.”  Why? For years we were able to show up on election day and we revered that day. It was a special occasion, a privilege. Since 2020, COVID set the precedent of voting many weeks prior to the election either by mail, drop boxes, or early voting centers.  The paradigm changed. Election officials now prefer weeks of elections where ballots are pouring in with little oversight and questionable chain of custody. Do voters really want to sacrifice the security of their ballot for convenience? Are we really getting that lazy and impatient about our process of selecting the people who represent us?

There are many risks and concerns regarding early voting. First, candidates can get access to poll book data to know who has voted and who hasn’t to drive turnout to their benefit. This would be advantageous for a candidate who has more funds to spend on a last minute “get out the vote” initiatives. This poll data could also potentially be modeled to predict not only turnout but potential results via sophisticated algorithms. If nefarious actors had access to the tabulator data via hacking or other methods (internal hidden modems/flash drives) they could “fine tune” algorithms to flip or weight votes in favor of a certain candidate.  In short, a longer voting period gives potential bad actors more data and more time to act.

An appropriate metaphor would be that early voting is similar to a poker player showing their cards to their opponent in a game. That would give the opponent the ability to know when to draw more cards for the win.

Elections matter and have world wide consequences. Power and money are powerful incentives to cheat. Lack of transparency just amplifies the voters’ lack of trust. The fact is that South Carolina citizens cannot get access to audit reports which provide details about how their vote is counted over the duration of the election (the cast vote record), the security logs (to confirm that there was no outside interconnectivity to the machines), and source codes (apparently counting dots on a paper is proprietary).  This should be of concern to every South Carolina voter.  We also have no idea who owns these corporations who are involved in our elections (ES&S, Clear Ballot, SCYTL) because they are closely held private entities.  There is a cloak of secrecy surrounding our electronic voting system and the vendors who provide services to that system.  On top of that, our State Election Commission is far less cooperative than many other states regarding their willingness to disclose the above information when compared to other states. See the chart below for one example that shows which states allow public disclosure of ballot images.

What is the answer?

We need to have reverence for our elections and not treat them like a quick trip to a fast-food restaurant drive through window. We must realize that in order to preserve the sanctity of our vote voting should have some “intention” behind it. The voters should educate themselves about the candidates and issues– not just vote for recognizable names. They should also plan on being available on election day—yes, it should only be one day and preferably a state and or national holiday so that voters are available.  One day voting is favored combined with preferably the old-fashioned method of hand counting hand-marked ballots.  This could be incorporated with technology that makes the process transparent and verifiable such as a live video feed.  Hand counting was done for years prior to any machines being involved and is currently used in some states as well as countries in Europe.  It requires keeping precincts small less than 1500 people (as is already mandated by law in South Carolina).

If 1,000 people show up at the polls (approximately a 70% turnout) this method would require about 8 people to count ballots and they could finish in about 4 to 4 1/2 hours.  If you pay these workers well, they will show up. Alternatively, you could use a system similar to jury duty selection to select workers. Young college students would be willing to work as well. This effort would save hundreds of thousands of dollars if not millions for the taxpayers—you would simply need paper, pens and people.  The cost would be far less than what is being paid to maintain the electronic voting system.  For one small example, in the city of Milton Georgia, cost savings estimates were $250K for their municipal election.

This simple hand count method would shift a high risk, high cost, low confidence system to a low risk, low cost, high confidence system. Isn’t that what voters want? After all, it is our tax dollars paying for these election processes. We would hate to think those dollars are being used to subvert our will.

Don’t get swayed by the mantra “vote early.”  Don’t let them see your cards in this crazy game of election poker.     Keep a poker face until election day. That’s playing your cards right to win the game.

Only citizens should vote in our elections

Currently our laws state that upon registration the applicant must sign an oath affirming their citizenship. There is no proof of citizenship required and no proof of ID required for those 65 and older. This should be addressed to ensure that only eligible qualified electors vote. Every ineligible voter cancels out one of our eligible votes.  Voter ID should be verified and documented any time there is a registration or re-registration.  The DMV is supposed to send information on new licenses and surrenders of licenses to the SEC monthly. How can we as citizens confirm that this is being done and that non-citizens are not being included? With millions of illegals flooding over our borders this is more essential than ever to ensure voters are legitimate. Furthermore, ERIC gets access to our DMV data and then provides it to NGOs and yet regular SC citizens aren’t able to gain access via FOIA.

Did you know that many voters in the 2020 election were dead or not still living at their registered residence?

We call on state legislatures across the nation to pass laws to ensure every voter is verified to be the actual voter regardless of method in which they vote at the time of voting, casting, or delivering a ballot;

Problem: Non-citizens or otherwise ineligible voters voting.

Solution: Strong voter ID that is recorded and available for the public to confirm –proof of citizenship should be required; ID should also be provided upon re registration. This also protects against bloated voter rolls.

Let’s keep election small, simple, and local

SC Pathway to Safe Elections

RNC Resolution Issue 5

Keep it small, simple, and local

WHEREAS, Election officials are obligated to apply polling place access equitably in states, and should not eliminate polling places in order and to move to “vote center” models that make polling place access more difficult in more conservative areas;

Vote centers mix ballots from multiple precincts making recounts tougher to execute and creating longer drives for voters. Plus, early voting has the counterintuitive effect of reducing voter turnout.

Ideally, we should have small precincts with no more than 1,500 registered voters. (Currently, over 900 precincts exceed that with the largest being over 6,200.) If there is a 65% turnout that would result in 975 ballots to be counted.  Even if you had to hand-count these ballots it would take about 3 1/4 hours to count with 3 teams of 3 or 4 people which is doable in one night. Local small precincts also enable us to better know our neighbors and verify their legitimacy. Minimizing absentees also reduces fake registrants.

Did you know that our elections that were traditionally held and counted at the precinct level are now controlled by corporations, and the state and federal government?

RESOLVED, The Republican National Committee calls on all Republican officeholders to defend the historic practice of geographically-defined and assigned precinct, ward and localized polling places for means of balloting and tabulating paper ballots by geographic unit;

RESOLVED, The Republican National Committee hereby opposes any and all efforts for states to unreasonably expand time periods for early or vote-by-mail that makes ballot counting procedures intentionally unmanageable or incapable to complete expeditiously following the conclusion of an election on election day;

Problem:  Centralized voting centers obscure results, depress turnout; centralization of power has the potential for corruption.

Solution: Abolish early voting and early voting centers and return to one day of precinct level voting limiting registrations to no more than 1500 electors.  Return control back to the local level.

Ban early voting and reduce reasons for absentee; make election day a state holiday;

Bill 4260 achieves this by striking 7-13-25 (Early voting). Ideally, all absentee ballots for the precinct should be processed and or tabulated at the precinct level.

You are not listening–Do we even have a representative form of government anymore?

Over the last few months 13 county Republican parties that comprise the majority of the state’s population (57% of our GOP delegates and roughly 60% of our population) of our state passed resolutions for hand-marked, hand-counted paper ballots. These resolutions had very similar language.  Specifically, they asked for hand-marked, hand-counted paper ballots.  In addition, many of these counties also ratified the RNC Resolution for Election Excellence.  Please see this related post. Note that this is the RNC for which Mr. McKissick is co-chair.

Apparently, neither of these resolutions were put forth for a vote in the past State EC GOP meeting on September 30th.  Instead, a substantial modification of the RNC resolution was passed that simply seemed to refer to our current system. It had no mention of hand-counting or hand-marked paper ballots. Below is a comparison of the RNC and State GOP resolutions.

There is a misunderstanding that our current system is a “paper ballot” system.  It is not. It is a coded ballot system.  The tabulators scan the bar code at the top of the paper “receipt” from the Ballot Marking Device. There is no way that a voter can verify their vote as they don’t have a barcode reader and, according to the State Election Commission, they can’t take a picture of their ballot.

Furthermore, our votes are counted in secret via the tabulators which are manufactured overseas –a serious security issue.   We can’t even verify the vote detail as we are not allowed access/view audit records (CVRs), the same records to which 28 other states allow public access.

The only hand-count reference in the election integrity resolution that was passed was for audits and recounts, not to count the actual election.

The only way that a voter can feel confident that their vote was counted in a transparent way is to have a system of hand-counted, hand-marked paper ballots that are counted at the precinct level (preferably with one day of voting, not 15 days+) while the count is publicly observed and videotaped.

The proposed system above is one that voters can trust. According to a Rasmussen survey, over 62% of likely voters believe there was cheating in the 2020 and 2022 elections and are concerned about cheating in the 2024 election. Unless we modify our current system, we will have voters and candidates who are disenfranchised and thus don’t participate in the process of elections in our state.

Contrary to the current narrative by some of our state leaders, our electronic voting system has numerous vulnerabilities that have been documented not only by cyber experts across the state and the country, but also by CISA itself. All systems are hackable. Period.  Ignoring the vulnerabilities of the electronic systems that are currently in place is naïve as well as suspect.

We are supposed to have a representative form of government in our state and country, and our counties deserve to be heard. What is the point of passing resolutions in multiple counties only to be ignored at the state level?  These resolutions that have been passed in these 13 counties should be heard and brought to a vote at the state GOP Executive Committee.

Our state has the opportunity to be the gold standard for election integrity. Let’s use this opportunity to ensure that is the case. Passing a weak version of the RNC Election Resolution shows that our state GOP isn’t willing to walk the walk when it comes to true election reform. Act 150 was not enough. The people want paper.

Why were election changes made without changes to the law?

SC Pathway to Safe Elections

RNC Resolution Issue 4

Election changes made without changes to the law.

WHEREAS, Elections have been under assault from those on the Left as they attempt to implement schemes and intentionally inject chaotic administrative changes that have drastically changed how elections are conducted in hundreds of the most populous counties and regions across the nation;

In 2020, there were many changes to election procedures without the approval of the respective state legislatures. This should have been viewed as illegal and voided the election results. Drop boxes, mailing all registered voters, no signature verification, were just some of the changes employed. It is essential that we implement laws that specifically state our position and that eliminate these tactics to minimize potential chain of custody issues and ineligible votes.

In South Carolina, this issue came up in 2020 when the then SEC director wanted to implement mail in balloting as well as a waiver of signature verification. The specific issue of signature verification ultimately made its way to the US supreme court and ultimately our legislature prevailed to prevent our state becoming “Georgia.” The point is that laws are made via the legislature and one person or one agency making major decisions for elections should not be allowed. Even more importantly, the current laws on the books are not always being followed as many poll observers witnessed in last year’s elections. There needs to be accountability to ensure that the election laws are followed.

We have a representative form of government not tyranny. Let’s remember that. The reason so many people don’t trust our elections is because so many changes were made that only complicated the process and led to less transparency and more confusion. Our legislature should continue to pass laws that favor enhanced transparency, accuracy, and auditability.

Why is counting of votes taking so long?

SC Pathway to Safe Elections

Maricopa County elections officials and observers watch as ballots are tallied at the Maricopa County Recorders

Computers should improve accuracy and speed—why is counting taking so long?

Americans expect accurate and swift determinations as it pertains to elections and the

administration of elections;

In 2020 and in 2022 we saw some counties extending the counting period for days if not weeks. This defies logic. In many other countries if the counting stops the election becomes null and void.  Delaying the results only creates the potential for fraud.  Many countries in Europe, like France, have gone to one day of voting with paper ballots counted the same day with only minimal absentee balloting due to worries about fraud. Also the Netherlands ditched machines in 2017 over concerns over cyber hacking.

Note that in 1997 in a Supreme court decision, Foster vs. Love, elections undecided by midnight are void. We can do better. Few absentee ballots, one day of voting, hand count at the precinct level hand-marked paper ballots. If France and the Netherlands can do it, so can we.