46°F
Cloudy
Full Forecaste

Home > Election

Ballot security could be issue in Minnesota recount

Tuesday, November 11, 2008 9:45 AM PST

By Patrick Condon
The Associated Press

Font Size:

MINNEAPOLIS — St. Louis County keeps election ballots in the courthouse attic. Anoka County keeps them locked in the basement. Hennepin County relies on its cities to keep ballots safe.

The lack of a uniform standard for counties safeguarding ballots after the election could come into play when those votes are recounted in Minnesota's U.S. Senate race.

The campaigns have been negotiating neutral standards for ballot security after an unsuccessful court challenge Saturday by Republican incumbent Norm Coleman to halt the counting of 32 absentee ballots from Minneapolis. Coleman's campaign questioned the ballots' legitimacy, saying it was told the ballots had been left for several days in the car of a Minneapolis election official.

A city spokesman said the ballots were never unaccounted for, and the Coleman campaign later said it accepted those assurances. But with Coleman and Democrat Al Franken separated by a little more than 200 votes out of nearly 3 million cast, ballot integrity remains an issue.

"There have been some concerning reports about strange things happening in the context of this recount," Republican Gov. Tim Pawlenty said. He said it's "important that the process be locked down and secure."

The last large-scale recount of a statewide election occurred in Washington state's 2004 gubernatorial race, which the Republican candidate initially appeared to win before losing to the Democrat after two recounts. In that case, vote totals changed several times upon discoveries of piles of uncounted ballots in several counties.

"It was an area where we thought we had good procedures in place," said Nick Handy, Washington's state elections director. "But the intense scrutiny of a razor-thin statewide recount really just brings everything to light."

Handy said overlooked ballots were the result of human error, but the oversights became a main focus of Republican Dino Rossi's unsuccessful lawsuit to overturn the election results after the second recount erased his lead. Handy said the Washington Legislature has since passed reforms to toughen the standards for handling ballots.

In Minnesota, rules enforced by the secretary of state require the municipalities that hold the elections to keep the ballots secure "until all recounts have been completed and until the time for contest of election has expired." There's no standard procedures for doing so.

Democratic Secretary of State Mark Ritchie sent a memo late Monday to all county auditors and election administrators urging any municipality with control over ballots to take certain safety steps such as making sure ballots are stored under lock and key.

Ritchie also recommended officials search their offices to make sure they've collected all paper and electronic material related to votes and voter registrations.

It's been standard practice at Minnesota county offices to collect and store ballots in a secure place. In St. Louis County, that's in a room in the attic of the courthouse; only the county elections director and the county auditor have keys. In Anoka County, only one key exists to the basement room where the ballots are held. In tiny Cottonwood County, the county auditor keeps the ballot locked in a vault in his office.

"No one is monkeying around with this. They're taking this dead serious," said Paul Tynjala, St. Louis County's director of elections. "The last thing anyone wants is someone to contend the integrity of the ballots was somehow disturbed."

In Hennepin County, the state's largest, it would be "logistically difficult" to keep all the ballots in one place because of the number of voters, deputy elections manager Kurt Hoffman said. Instead, the ballots remain in the custody of the cities where the votes were cast. "There's an understanding between the cities and the county that they're going to keep them secured," Hoffman said.

After the weekend flap over the Minneapolis absentees, the Coleman campaign proposed to the Franken campaign a uniform set of standards for securing ballots based on the system established by Stearns County.

Among other provisions, Stearns County requires ballots remain under lock and key; that only two keys to the room exist; that any time county staff enters the room, at least two people must be present; that a log be kept noting why and when any workers entered the room; and that representatives of Senate campaigns be allowed to keep "visual guard" outside the ballot storage room.

The Franken campaign suggested several modifications. By Monday afternoon, the campaigns appeared to be close to an agreement on ballot security procedures.

Previous Next

Louie wrote on Nov 11, 2008 11:54 AM:

" What the United States needs in a uniform voting proceedure. It should be the same in every little nook and cranny in America. The count should also be made by competent people. "

dewey wrote on Nov 11, 2008 2:32 PM:

" Looks like Christine Gregoire sent some of her ballot counters to Minnesota. They should be good enough now to make up the votes in one recount instead of wasting time in multiple recounts. "

cheney119 wrote on Nov 12, 2008 8:45 AM:

" dewey are you sure you aren't talking about Carl Rove Florida? Our long national nightmare could have been avoided had it not been for Rove in Florida. The closer an election is the more scrutiny the election procedures receive, but the bottomline is; elections are human endeavors and none are perfect. Who would care about 32 ballots if someone were ahead by 10,000 or 40,000 votes? Nobody would care and those 32 votes, and even absentee ballots wouldn't even be counted, which is common practice across the country, unless the election is very close. Look at what an effort is was to simply get a bigger ballot box in the civic center. Election officials don't realize their procedures are flawed until something goes wrong, I don't think you can correct that fact with national and universal procedures without incredible amounts of waste and inefficiency. We are still a federal republic, federal means states have to handle this stuff. Compared to news reports of 7 hour lines to vote back east, all mail-in voting makes a lot of sense. "

TDN Bad Boy wrote on Nov 12, 2008 11:36 AM:

" There goes those Liberals ranting about mail in votes. Mail in votes open a lot of risks. How many of us have heard of households where either a man or woman is extremely dominant or abusive. Would that person than vote twice or more in the event they have an unmotivated voting age child living at home? The polling booth is the only way to properly oversee one vote one person. A woman in an abusive situation gets to go into the booth alone. If she wants to vote differently then she has been ordered to, she can and not admit it. I wish the above scenario were not true, but we all know it is. That is just one way to beat the mail-in system. There are many other dangers such as mail theft, multiple address registration, etc. But my guess is the lazy Liberals will there way on that one all across America. Voting is a right and a priviledge. Going into a voting booth is the true democratic way. "

November 2009
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30

›› Today's Events
›› Submit An Event

View All Events

Top Jobs
Top Garage Sales
Top Rentals