http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/10/opinion/10thu2.html
The New York Times
September 10, 2009
Editorial
The
Business of Voting Machines
Diebold announced last week that it has sold its United
States voting machine division to its main rival, Election Systems &
Software.
Given Diebold’s troubling record, it is hard to lament its
departure from American elections, but this sale could make a bad situation
worse. Regulators should take a hard look at the anticompetitive implications.
And Congress, the states and cities need to push a lot harder for fundamental
reforms in the voting machine business and the way Americans vote.
Diebold has long been the company that critics of electronic
voting love to hate. The company has been accused of illegally installing
uncertified software and of making machines that, at least sometimes, drop
votes. The company raised serious doubts about its objectivity when Diebold’s
then-chief executive wrote a fund-raising letter expressing his dedication to
delivering Ohio for President George W. Bush in 2004. Ohio, of course, was one
of the states using Diebold voting machines.
The combination of the Election Systems & Software and
Diebold American voting machine divisions raises classic antitrust concerns.
Election Systems & Software, which has also been criticized for making
unreliable machines, would be the nation’s largest voting machine maker by far.
And states and cities, which have long complained about the low quality and
high cost of the machines, would have less choice or bargaining power.
Government at all levels must do more to promote
competition. It is important that machines are certified for use only after
they pass rigorous testing. But the current state certification processes are
so expensive and drawn-out that they are a significant barrier to entry.
More fundamentally, Congress, the states and cities should
look for ways to have governments own and manage their voting machines, as the
reform group FairVote has advocated. It makes no sense to allow private
companies to count votes using secret, proprietary software. The federal
government and the states should also require that all electronic voting
machines produce a paper record of every vote and mandate random hand counts to
ensure the reliability of the results.
Even if this business deal deserves to be blocked, it will
take a lot more than that to fix the broken voting machine industry.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company