I think America leaned too far in on the voting machines, TBH.
Results don't take long to count, even though there are about 30 million ballots. Polls close at 10pm, the first constituency declares some time between 11 and midnight usually, it's 90% done by about 6am[1], and the last will be some time on the second day if there are multiple recounts. Due to the FPTP system, it doesn't really even matter about the rest once the post is already reached - which is its own problem, but it's not like machine-based recount drama doesn't drag on for ages too.
[1]: https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/CBP-...
We should also not be accepting votes with date stamps past election day. Or votes with no date stamp.
If we go all-in on electronic ballots, I think this is the place we could use a block chain to ensure security, traceability and accountability.
In fact voting is extremely accurate throughout the democratic world regardless of counting method, and this fact wasn't particularly controversial for decades and decades.
The idea that we somehow have a problem to be solved is the actual attack on democracy. And it's working. I know it sounds like hyperbole, but there is a very serious risk that the USA has already seen its last peaceful democratic handover of power. The people with control of the levers of power seem extremely disinclined to accept loss of that power.
Voting machines are far easier to hack than human processes, and there have been numerous presentations on this particular topic.
American politics being off the deep end is an entirely different topic.
Money doesn't work like ballots. All ballots are the same value, and each voter is entitled to one only.
If the pennies in my account are miscounted, I certainly won't give a damn.
Voting machines are have proven to be reliable in the US. Dominion Voting continues to rack up huge defamation wins in court over this. You're just FUDding.
The US has indeed largely moved towards "voting machines," but I should be explicit about what this means. These aren't the touchscreen computer-only (direct-recording electronic) machines that were hastily deployed after Bush v Gore. The overwhelming majority of states and municipalities now use some kind of optical-scan paper ballot technology, like scantron forms that are tabulated and kept safe in a box with a scanner bolted onto it. So even if the scanner is broken, there's a reliable record of voter intent.
https://ballotpedia.org/Voting_methods_and_equipment_by_stat...
From what I recall, our polling station, which served only a small portion of the city, was broken into several polls, each run by 2 or 3 poll workers.
At then end of the day the poll workers personally counted the ballots they collected at their poll (so every ballot was counted at least twice, and each individual only counted a fraction of the ballots at the station.) Monitors from the different political parties were free to watch the whole process.
I'm definitely getting some details wrong, but generally the whole thing, plus automatic recounts for tight races left no doubts for me.
edit: First results are in within a couple of hours, depending on how many things are on the ballot.
> Prior to 2022, no legislatures were considering this [mandating hand counts] extreme proposal.
An honest article wouldn't call the counting method used in most of Europe, Canada, Japan, India, and countless other countries, "extreme". Of course it deftly omits mention of any other country, leaving the reader uninformed. I'm sure it's just a coincidence..
I am from one such country, and I enjoy not having a bottomless rabbit hole of computer security underpinning our elections.
_And_ we have mail-in ballots.
When issues do arise it tends to occur when a ballot box needs to be transported between locations; when this occurs it is taken quite seriously by Elections Canada.
It works great. Perhaps the USA should contact Elections Canada and learn a thing or two.
Only because fearmongering about election fraud isn’t a top priority of a major political party. That’s all we have going on in the USA - one party’s head has constantly baselessly called into question the accuracy of election results and so now it’s big news.
https://www.ctvnews.ca/federal-election-2025/article/mislead...
In my US County I vote on 20+ ballot measures and positions most elections. Very few other countries have the ballot complexity and sheer number of votable items like the US.
Typically ballots only have a handful of names on them; municipal ballots tend to have more due to the size of council. Occasionally there's a great many, due to efforts like the Longest Ballot Committee, and Elections Canada makes the ballot a write-in instead of multiple choice.
However my question would be more one of... why do that then?
Are voters actually able to make a conscious, informed decision on the governor, state rep, coroner, judge, board of equalization member, insurance commissioner, etc? Or are they looking at the governor and _maybe_ state rep and just voting R/D down the ballot?
In that case, at _best_ a candidate can influence who people vote for mostly based on how much money they can spend on advertising, memorable sound bites, and advocating to change things that may not need changing. Maybe we don't need a bazillion ads telling us how "tough on crime" the judge will be in a country with almost 5x the rate of incarceration as China?
Maybe Arizona would have an easier time counting elections if people didn't need to vote for the State Mine Inspector?
It varies by province, but in Canada generally the judges are selected by having an arms-length committee of some lay people, a couple judges and a couple lawyers select a few possible candidates from people who meet some reasonable qualifications, and the minister of justice picks from the list and has it confirmed by the current government.
> We manage that by having simple ballots which make voter intent clear
In Germany, the Supreme Court has banned voting machines as unconstitutional.
The method is simple: Have relatively small voting districts, recruit civil servants as supervisors. Allow anyone from all parties to supervise and be present, especially during counting. Hand out the ballot sheet upon displaying an ID. Upload the counted result to a website where people can check that the reported count matches the actual count.
The EU has a lot of problems, efficient voting isn't one of them.
The result is delivered in a matter of hours, and since vote counting is a parallell process it scales well enough that I doubt it would take much longer in the US. The US have massively more complicated ballots though, which I think is another issue entirely that you guys must solve.
I doubt it would be very expensive either. You don't have to pay people very much to do their civic duty every couple of years and count a couple hundred ballots.
Frankly this is never going to happen. The US democracy is extremely distributed and as a result each school district, water district, county, city, state and the federal government each have races and ballot items that citizens vote on.
Undoing this system is likely intractable without completely redesigning the US system of governance.
So no USA is not a special flower here, you can absolutely hand count those things.
However, I think a weakness in the arguments is that many of the tabulation machines we have are very old, poorly designed for vote integrity (eg no paper ballots or confusing scan sheet design), and closed source which can lead to accusations of both hardware/software flipping votes and the systems being impossible to audit.
To counter these concerns you can use paper ballots everywhere, open source software for the machines, and risk limiting audits to verify the count.
Voting Works builds software for both sides of these voting processes as OSS with machine scanned paper ballots.
1. it is really hard to do any fraud for multiple reasons:
\* the people counting are pseudo randomly chosen
\* but even if you somehow managed to get "your" people to count then you've only secured one very small portion of the votes
\* the counting areas are near to each other so some random citizens would be able to observe multiple counting areas at once
\* there is no "winner takes all" rule in Germany and neither is there a electoral college.
2. The counting and reporting processes are well monitored and documented so that simple inconsistencies become visible right away either in the counting group (7-9 people in general) or when they phone in the results to the central point.3. There is obviously a cost involved in having people count BUT i can't imagine it being more that paying for the counting machines since the people involved aren't paid normal wages but instead expense allowances.
I fully support handcounting over machine counting! But the US would still have to get rid of old traditions, namely electoral college and gerrymandering practices. The popular vote should be the deciding factor most of the time!
In any case, the idea that these ballots can be accurately hand counted is absurd. In some of the hand count examples in the states mentioned in the article only one or two races on ballots with 10's of races were recounted and even those recounts were problematic.
What's really telling is that none of the people elected in 2020 or 2022 or 2024 at the state legislature level are calling for recounts of THEIR races. Machines are fine when the right party wins.
Machines are the only way to deal with a ballot with 60 races. There are other parameters that could be put in place to help improve people's faith in the system. San Francisco makes ballot images available via a web portal. It's entirely possible that an AI model could be trained to rapidly recount any and all of the races to validate the official results. Tighter ID requirements would be OK, it's 2025 and even people in the hills and reservations should have IDs.
Not one official who was elected in 2020 at the state legislature level called for invalidating their own election and recounting their race.
And one county in Arizona that was considering hand counting, a county that voted overwhelmingly across the board for the party attempting to overturn the election, looked at the practicality of a hand count and decided it was too expensive and problem prone. https://www.naco.org/news/numbers-stack-against-hand-count-m...
Unintentional ones should be distributed more or less evenly, if everyone have 10 less votes it should not change the end result.
But intentional ones, with the objective of trying to rig the result in one particular direction, and deep enough into whoever is doing the count/election. But in the end, it goes to how big the conspiracy should be? You may need just a few to rig all the voting machines (do you have the source code? of what was actually running in production everywhere?), but with human counters to get to the right scale you may need to involve really a lot of people.
hnfromchile•5mo ago