Senator Dodd Kills Voter Paper Trail Bill
by
Mike DeRosa
07.18.2004 -- When does a U.S. Senator have influence on a
state legislature? If CT legislative Bill 388 is any
indicator, the answer is anytime he feels like it. Bill 388
was a bill recently passed by the CT State Senate
unanimously. It required a voter verifiable paper trail for
every vote cast on a computer voting machine in CT. Bill 388
got unanimous support in both the Government and Elections
and Appropriations committees of the CT legislature during
the last session.
The bill was created and supported by the activist
organization V.O.T.E.R. (Voter Opportunity Through Election
Reform). According to sources, the bill fell on hard times
when it reached the CT House. "The people in the office
killed the bill," said one highly placed member of the
legislature. The "office" is a secret caucus were
the top leaders of the legislature and a representative of
the governor decide the ultimate fate of all bills. They did
so according to several sources after Senator Dodd
circulated a letter he had written to other U.S. Senators
that claimed that a CT voter verifiable paper trail bill for
all computer voting machines would violate the so-called
Help America Vote Act (HAVA).
Senator Dodd was instrumental in writing and getting
H.A.V.A. passed in the U.S. Congress. Critics say that the
HAVA act, which was created in response to the 2000 election
debacle in FL, is really the "Help George W. Bush Steal
The Election Act." Senator Dodd has also stated
publicly that a "paper trail" would violate the
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Unfortunately,
Senator Dodd has not read a recent position paper written by
the Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department that
says that voter verifiable paper trail legislation does not
"on its surface" violate HAVA and ADA. It seems
that the last time Senator Dodd had contact with the
Department of Justice was when he voted to confirm John
Ashcroft's nomination to become Attorney General of the U.S.
(he was one of only a handful of Democrats that did so).
Our sources say that Dodd encouraged Secretary of State
Bysiewicz , a candidate for Governor, to circulate his
letter to key legislators including Rep. Jim O'Rourke
(co-chair of the G & E committee, who some say initially
put the breaks on the bill in the house). Another source
said that Dodd made his views about the CT paper trail
legislation know to Bysiewicz during a casual meeting at a
political event. O'Rourke says he supported the legislation
but had no control over the outcome. O'Rourke says he
"could not find anyone in the CT legislature who
opposed the bill". So how is it, that a bill that was
supported by everyone, including Bysiewicz, ended up the
cutting room floor? Welcome to business as usual, back room
style, at the CT legislature. All legislators are equal but
some legislators are more equal than others, especially if
they are U.S. Senators.
The bigger question is why would a Democratic Party
insider like Senator Dodd be willing to put his party in
harms way in the voting booth in 2004? Why would he oppose
one of the few secure and reasonable ways to defeat voting
fraud and manipulation by voting machines companies (Diebold
and ES & S etc) owned by right wing Bush supporters?
Didn't he and others in the Democratic party learn anything
from the debacle run by Jeb Bush, Catherine Harris, and
Clayton Roberts in FL in 2000? Have they learned nothing
from the recent "breakdown" of voting machines and
other voting machine company lawbreaking in California? And
by the way, why and how did a "liberal" senator
from CT ever vote to confirm John Ashcroft, a man who does
not believe in the U.S. Constitution's Bill Of Rights, and
who is consider by many legal scholars to be the worst
Attorney General in U.S. history? Why indeed!
Mike DeRosa is a member of V.O.T.E.R. If you would like
further information on voter verifiable paper trail
legislation and related issues, go to Mike DeRosa's website:
www.newfocusradio.org (look under Black Box Voting).
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