kenberg, on 2020-September-26, 08:01, said:
How are they counted? Well, I don't know. But then I have never known in ay election I have voted in. I had an experience in college, definitely at odds with the care Passed Out cites. I worked various jobs, some long term, some very short term. Somehow I learned that there was a one day job delivering ballots from one place to another and I did that. The votes were cast in location X, they were counted at location Y, I was a college kid with a car who took the ballots from X to Y. I suppose they were boxed in some reasonably secure way but for 45 minutes or so I was in sole possession of them. I suppose I could have done something, but of course I was trying to make a buck, not influence a vote.
In my experience in Upper Michigan, all of the stiff paper ballots were read by optical scanners, so there was no need to transport them elsewhere to be counted. After the count was complete, though, the ballots were boxed to be stored in case a manual recount was needed or a candidate disputed the results reported. After the serialized stubs come off the unmarked ballots, the main control is that the number of ballots boxed has to match the total number of detached stubs. The boxes of ballots are closed with a seal bearing the signatures of the representatives of both major parties as well as the count of ballots in the box. I'd be surprised to learn that Minnesota failed to use a similar method when ballots were transported to be counted.
I'm not saying it's impossible for someone to open the box of completed ballots without breaking that seal, but it would be quite a trick to do so undetected. And even then, if the count varied upon opening the box of ballots, that would also trigger a tampering alert.
Expanding a bit on this, it is not uncommon for the number of completed ballots to be a bit less than the number of detached stubs. In that event, a reconciliation report explaining the reason for the difference is written and signed by representatives of both major parties. For example, the optical scanner rejects ballots with errors, the most common being over-voting (voting for two candidates for one position or, say, for three school board members when only two positions are open). The error message from the scanner identifies the error detected, giving the voter the option to request and complete a new ballot. The rejected ballot is destroyed and that fact noted on the reconciliation report. The voter can also choose to leave the ballot for manual counting with the absentee ballots after the polls close. In that process, the poll worker tallies only correct votes, skipping the over-votes.
Sometimes a person shows up to vote and does not appear on the list of registered voters for that polling place. In that case, a poll worker calls around to find the correct location for the voter, not always successfully. The voter has the right to insist that the registration list is incorrect and to demand and complete a ballot. In that situation, the completed ballot is treated as a provisional ballot -- to be counted later (if needed) should the voter prove to be correct. Those provisional ballots, too, are accounted for on the reconciliation report.
Writing this down reminded me of an incident I witnessed working an election. A voter got quite upset at the scanner rejecting her ballot for an over-vote. After a poll worker explained the problem and her options, the voter chose a new ballot. When she completed it, the scanner also rejected her second ballot for an over-vote. Instead of putting her ballot in with the absentees, she loudly cursed a blue streak and tore the ballot into tiny pieces as everyone looked on. Another item for the reconciliation report.
By no means do I contend that voting procedures are 100% foolproof. When you have hundreds of millions of folks voting, some things will go wrong. I've seen poll workers who, despite their training, exhibited a lot of trouble following detailed instructions. I've read of isolated cases of pure fraud.
Nevertheless, I feel confident in saying that the folks who designed the procedures to make sure that absentee ballots go only to registered voters who've requested them also put the same effort into the procedures for counting those votes. The folks who work polling places are local citizens, and civic-minded ones at that, in my experience. If the votes counted at the polling places don't match those later reported for those places, someone will blow the whistle.
The growth of wisdom may be gauged exactly by the diminution of ill temper. Friedrich Nietzsche
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists that is why they invented hell. Bertrand Russell