Rightfully
Sequoia Voting Systems has been taking a beating over the
past few days due to their threatening emails sent to New
Jersey counties and to computer scientists at Princeton
University. It is clear that Sequoia knows something about
the problems with their voting machines used in the primary
and they don’t want anyone outside of their company to
find the problem. ...
NAtional: EAC
to Discuss States' Use of Remaining HAVA [Funds] at Denver
Meeting LINK
Arizona: Opinion
- Test ballots shouldn't leave county offices LINK
Arizona: Pima
County - Voter notification cards will serve as ID at polls
LINK
California:
California secretary of state wins Profiles in Courage
Award LINK
California:
California Secretary of State Debra Bowen Awarded 2008 JFK
Profile in Courage Award LINK
Advertisement - scroll to continue reading
California: San
Francisco - SF's New Non-Crappy Voting Machines May
Actually Be Crappy LINK
California: Santa
Clara County - Opinion - Early-bird voting changes election
dynamics LINK
California: San
Joaquin County - Registrar: Primary election 'smooth' LINK
Colorado: Money
woes spell doom for paper-ballot bill LINK
Ohio: Editorial -
Brunner is too fond of battles fought behind the scenes LINK
Ohio: Ohio
Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner wins John F. Kennedy
Profile in Courage Award LINK
Pennsylvania:
Major flaw in State of Pennsylvania online voter
registration puts user data at risk LINK
Washington: State
ballot could pit two from same party LINK
**"Daily
Voting News" is meant as a comprehensive listing of reports
each day concerning issues related to election and voting
news around the country regardless of quality or political
slant. Therefore, items listed in "Daily Voting News" may
not reflect the opinions of VotersUnite.Org or Scoop.**
If you're using Scoop for work, your organisation needs to pay a small license fee with Scoop Pro. We think that's fair, because your organisation is benefiting from using our news resources. In return, we'll also give your team access to pro news tools and keep Scoop free for personal use, because public access to news is important!