That's what Ohio voters will be able to ask at the primary, thanks to a recent directive issued by Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner:
Franklin County and all other Ohio counties that use touch-screen voting systems must provide a paper ballot to any voter who asks for one in the March 4 primary, the state's chief elections officer has ordered.
Poll workers won't be told to offer the option to voters but must provide a ballot if requested to help "avoid any loss of confidence by voters that their ballot has been accurately cast or recorded," a directive from Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner said. The paper ballots would be counted by optical scanners at county elections boards.
An imperfect system, yes, but a welcomed band-aid approach in a state that was notorious plagued by touch-screen machine irregularities in 2004.