
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This week, we're talking election security and technology. Today's show is focused on old tech: paper. Remember the 2000 presidential election fiasco and the hanging chads, those tiny bits of paper that stuck to paper ballots? They confused vote counters so much the Supreme Court eventually had to decide the election. Well, in 2002, Congress passed the Help America Vote Act. It set new voting standards and gave election offices a bunch of money, mostly for new electronic voting machines. But within a few years, election security officials were asking for a good old-fashioned paper trail. Dana DeBeauvoir, who runs elections in Travis County, Texas, went on a yearslong quest to design her own electronic voting machine, complete with paper trail. (10/23/18)
By Marketplace4.5
12561,256 ratings
This week, we're talking election security and technology. Today's show is focused on old tech: paper. Remember the 2000 presidential election fiasco and the hanging chads, those tiny bits of paper that stuck to paper ballots? They confused vote counters so much the Supreme Court eventually had to decide the election. Well, in 2002, Congress passed the Help America Vote Act. It set new voting standards and gave election offices a bunch of money, mostly for new electronic voting machines. But within a few years, election security officials were asking for a good old-fashioned paper trail. Dana DeBeauvoir, who runs elections in Travis County, Texas, went on a yearslong quest to design her own electronic voting machine, complete with paper trail. (10/23/18)

32,246 Listeners

30,609 Listeners

8,801 Listeners

941 Listeners

1,390 Listeners

1,649 Listeners

2,178 Listeners

5,480 Listeners

113,121 Listeners

56,944 Listeners

9,556 Listeners

10,331 Listeners

3,620 Listeners

6,097 Listeners

6,592 Listeners

6,462 Listeners

163 Listeners

2,990 Listeners

155 Listeners

1,377 Listeners

90 Listeners