Election Reform Newsletter, Issue #56
Election Reform Newsletter
AEI | The Brookings Institution.
July 16, 2008
Election Reform Newsletter.
On Topic.New Resources.Events. Forward to a Colleague.
On Topic: Election 2008
States across the country reported record numbers of new registrants during this year’s presidential primaries, and high levels of voter interest suggest this trend may continue to November’s general election. A new analysis from Election Law @ Moritz examines the challenges this may cause, while a new report from the EAC looks at the HAVA-mandated ID requirements for these first-time voters when they go to the polls.
Read more »
»  OPINION/ANALYSIS: "Registration Bottlenecks: Will They Be a Problem in '08?,"Nathan Cemenska, Election Law @ Moritz (July 2008)
»  OPINION/ANALYSIS: "Case Studies on the Impact of the Help America Vote Act's Identification Requirements for First-Time Voters" (PDF), U.S. Election Assistance Commission (May 2008)
 
 
 
 
Most voters across the country have the opportunity to go to the polls twice a year: for a primary and for a general election. Thanks to front-loaded presidential primaries and special contests, however, some jurisdictions are being faced with the challenge of mounting more elections this year. In San Francisco, for example, there will have been five elections between November 2007 and November 2008; a new report highlights various issues that this frequency of contests has raised and makes recommendations for improvement going forward.
Read more »
 
 
 
Local jurisdictions nationwide devote significant resources to planning for run-of-the-mill Election Day mishaps, like ballot shortages and machine breakdowns. In the aftermath of events like Hurricane Katrina, however, many administrators have come to realize that contingency plans in the event of natural or manmade disasters are also needed. In May, the House Committee on House Administration conducted a hearing to examine what lessons have been learned at all levels of government in this area, and to discuss what steps should be taken next.
Read more »
 

New Resources
ELECTION ADMINISTRATION
The Human Dimension of Elections: How Poll Workers Shape Public Confidence in Elections (PDF)
Thad Hall (Utah), J. Quin Monson (BYU), and Kelly Patterson (BYU)
Institute of Public and International Affairs, University of Utah (April 2008)
Viewpoint: Redefining What It Means to Be a Poll Worker
Matthew Corritore
AEI-Brookings Election Reform Project (July 2008)
VOTING INTEGRITY
The Threat of Non-Citizen Voting (PDF)
Hans von Spakovsky
The Heritage Foundation (July 2008)
TECHNOLOGY ISSUES
You Go to Elections With the Voting System You Have: Stop-Gap Mitigations for Deployed Voting Systems (PDF) J. Alex Halderman (Princeton), Hovav Schacham (University of California, San Diego), Eric Rescoria (RTFM, Inc.), and David Wagner (University of California, Berkeley)
USENIX/ACCURATE EVT 2008 (July 2008)
Broken: The Regulatory Process for the Voting Industry (PDF)
David Beirne
Election Technology Council (June 2008)
MORE ON ELECTION REFORM
 
Events
Public Meeting
U.S. Election Assistance Commission
July 21, 2008
Phoenix, AZ
 
 
About The Election
Reform Project
The AEI-Brookings Election Reform Project aims to synthesize election-related research, link the research and policy communities, track and assist the implemen-
tation of the Help America Vote Act (HAVA) and encourage improvements in HAVA and in election conduct and administration.
 
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Featured Resources
In this paper, the authors highlight several ways that improper removal could occur under current list matching procedures and argue for several measures to guard against the accidental removal of registered voters from the rolls.
This report examines a number of accessibility issues presented by current electronic voting systems and makes recommendations for reform.
Electionline.org surveys the state of election reform in 2006 and compares it to that of 2000. The report provides state-by-state data in the areas of voting systems, voter ID requirements, provisional voting, and more.
This paper attempts to replicate widely-cited results from a prior study that show that voting-by-mail increases turnout in Oregon. They conclude that any increases derive from the novelty of a new voting technique and from unique circumstances surrounding the first three vote-by-mail elections.
This report summarizes concisely the major points made and lines of reasoning offered by the Supreme Court in its various decisions upholding Indiana's voter identification law.
Research Projects
As part of its broader research focus on elections, campaign ethics, campaign finance, and the legislative process, the Center for American Politics and Citizenship at the University of Maryland is engaged in research projects on voting technology and ballot design specifically.
Part of the Institute for Governmental Studies at the University of California at Berkeley, the Election Administration Research Center (EARC) aims to improve the administration of elections.
Electionline.org provides daily news updates on election reform issues, as well as deeper analysis of selected topics, including recent reports on voter registration, recount procedures, and the progress in implementing the Help America Vote Act since 2002.
Election Law @ Moritz, run through Moritz College of Law at the Ohio State University, contains both explanation and commentary on a wealth of election reform issues from a legal perspective.
Directed by early voting scholar Paul Gronke and housed at Reed College, the Early Voting Information Center provides news and research on and a state-by-state overview of early voting issues.
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