According to
Brad Blog, Senators Barbara Boxer, Russ Feingold and Chris Dodd have introduced emergency legislation which would amend the Help America Vote Act of 2002. The bill would "reimburse jurisdictions for amounts paid or incurred in preparing, producing, and using contingency paper ballots in the November 7, 2006, Federal general election."
More in extended.
The legislation, filed just after 4pm ET this afternoon, would refund state and county voting jurisdictions that offer paper ballots as an option to voters, and requires such jurisdictions post "in a conspicuous manner at the polling place, a notice stating that contingency paper ballots are available at the polling place and that a voter may request to use such a ballot at the voter's discretion."
Election integrity advocacy groups and citizens alike have been rallying members of both the U.S. House and Senate to pass such legislation since The BRAD BLOG initially called for what we had called, the "LET AMERICA VOTE ACT" last Tuesday. The act we called for would mandate emergency paper ballots at all polling places this November in light of thousands of voters having been sent away without having been able to cast a vote in primary after primary election so far this year when new electronic voting machines either malfunctioned or were otherwise unavailable.
The short Boxer/Dodd bill does not mandate the use of such ballots, but rather offers federal payment to local jurisdictions that choose to make such 'contingency paper ballots' available at either the voter's request or in the event of machine malfunction.
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The BRAD BLOG has learned that Boxer and Dodd chose to make the use of "contingency paper ballots" an option to states, rather than a mandate, in hopes that it would make the bill less contentious and easier to pass in the few days left in this legislative session before the election recess.
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With just 4, or so, legislative days left in this Congress before they break for their Election Recess, it'll be no easy feat to see the bill passed by both the House and Senate before they leave. But given the stakes, and the bi-partisan call across the country for such a measure, we hope the Congress can act with the speed appropriate for a bill so important to, at least, helping to mitigate the train wreck that our democracy may be headed for this November 7th.
As Senator Boxer told the
NYT:
"I think Big Brother dictating something to local jurisdictions is a big mistake, because they will balk at it," she said. "What we're saying here is that you run your own elections, and we are going to help you run it properly. If local officials don't take advantage of the option to take precautions, then they're the ones on the line."
You know what to do, contact your representatives via the
Secretary of State Project. The bill doesn't go as far as what's needed, but it provides a degree of opportunity for state and local elections officials to make last-minute emergency voting contigency plans. Under a Republican-controlled Congress, even this bill will have a tough time passing. It'll need a widespread netroots push, to say the least, to get the sloth-like members of Congress to act on this before Congress adjourns.