When the gubernatorial election rolls around next year, most of Maryland’s touch-screen voting machines will be past their prime.
The state is already facing a shortage of voting machines, with only four jurisdictions in the last presidential election providing enough to meet state regulations.
In 2014, voting machines in 23 of the state’s 24 jurisdictions will be at least 10 years old, reaching the limit of the manufacturer’s guarantee. Roughly a third of these machines will have exceeded their useful life as determined by the manufacturer.
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the dems will need more time to properly program the new electronic voting machines before they roll them out. i mean, come on, the just go the ones we have working "right", excuse me, LEFT, as the case may be.
ReplyDeleteBRING BACK PAPER BALLETS!!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteElectronic voting only makes it easier to rig an election.
Hacking Democracy - a documentary that proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that voter fraud is alive and aided by these machines. Yet not surprisingly nothing has been done about it.
We are supposed to be using paper now, unfunded mandate
ReplyDelete