Duncan Urges Voters to Cast
Absentee Ballots
By Megha Rajagopalan
Capital News Service
Tuesday, Oct. 10, 2006
ROCKVILLE, Md. - Saying he had no confidence in electronic voting machines,
Montgomery County Executive Doug Duncan Tuesday urged voters to
cast absentee ballots instead of going to the polls.
"This is inexcusable," Duncan said at a press conference. "We
keep getting these machines that aren't working from the state,
and we can't get it together at the county."
Duncan, who said he plans to cast an absentee ballot himself,
joins gubernatorial candidates Maryland Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich
and Baltimore Mayor Martin O'Malley in the suggestion. Both
candidates have expressed doubts about touch-screen voting
machines made by Diebold Election Systems Inc. that are used in
polls throughout the state.
Until this year, only people who were unable to go to the
polls could vote by absentee ballot. But a new law allows voters
to cast absentee ballots without giving a reason.
The push toward absentee ballots comes after computer
glitches and human errors in Montgomery County polls kept some
voters from casting ballots during the Sept. 12 primary
election.
Election officials have said widespread use of absentee
ballots could delay election results.
Nancy H. Dacek, president of the Montgomery County Board of
Elections, said Tuesday she had complete confidence in the
Diebold voting machines. She said the most significant problem
in Montgomery County during the primary was not computer
glitches, but a human error that left polls without the
electronic cards necessary to access machines.
"Except for one other occasion, we've had very smooth
elections, and we expect this one to be a very smooth election
too," she said. "Nobody can guarantee perfection, but I don't
see that there will be any problems."
Dacek urged voters to go to the polls as they normally would
unless they have a reason to vote by absentee ballot. The board
is prepared for absentee ballots, she said, but a flood of them
could take days to count.
Duncan said accuracy in counting the votes is more important
than delays absentee ballots could cause.
"Human error is when you have one or two polling places miss
something," Duncan said. "When every polling place misses
something, that's gross incompetence."
The problems, which included flaws in the voting machines,
misplaced electronic cards and absent poll judges, forced
morning voters to use paper ballots. When polls ran out of the
provisional ballots, voters were turned away, and polls had to
stay open an extra hour to compensate.
Last month, Diebold said it fixed a design flaw that made the
machines freeze repeatedly on the day of the primary.
Linda Lamone, state elections administrator, said in a
statement last week that kinks in the Diebold machines are
worked out and the machines will work smoothly during general
elections.
Duncan said, however, he wouldn't be fully confident in the
computers until those he believes are responsible for primary
mishaps are held accountable.
"I don't think things are really going to change until they
get new leadership," Duncan said. "The administrator [Dacek] is
in over her head, and I think that's true at the state level as
well."
Duncan last month called for Ehrlich to fire Dacek, president
of Montgomery County's Board of Elections. He also requested
Margaret Jurgenson, the county's election director, be removed
from her post.
Samuel Statland, the secretary of the Montgomery County board
of elections, said Duncan's response was justified. "We made an
egregious error in the primary," he said. "But we've worked our
tails off correcting it."
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