MOTHER JONES BY E-MAIL

Film Review: Uncounted: The New Math of American Elections

Arts: If at times facts presented in this film seem overly suggestive or downright implausible, trust your instincts.

August 14, 2008


TOOLS

EmailE-mail article
PrintPrint article




BACKTALK

E-mail the editor





Google


Long lines. Misallocated voting machines. Voters inexplicably purged from the rolls. Sound familiar? Through interviews with activists and policymakers, filmmaker David Earnhardt surveys these and other symptoms of America's ailing electoral system in the documentary Uncounted. While the film ends with sound advice—volunteer to be a poll worker; lobby against paperless machines, and support a national holiday on election day—the bulk of Uncounted relies less on facts to back its claims than on a canned, conspiratorial score.

If at times facts presented in Uncounted are often seem to you overly suggestive and or downright implausible, trust your instincts.

At one point the following text appears on the screen (accompanied by ominous cello notes): "Two voting machine companies—ES&S and Diebold—electronically counted 80 percent of the votes in the 2004 presidential election. Both companies have extensive ties to the Republican party." Source: Baltimore Chronicle 12/09/04."

Click over to the Chronicle, an online newspaper, and you'll find that it did indeed run an article containing that 80 percent figure—as a directly quoted citation of the American Free Press. Click over to the Free Press, and you'll find a fringe-right conspiracist website. Click around their site some more, and what do you find? That one of their primary focus coverage areas is the nefarious influence of international Jewry. And that's just one of their favorite conspiracy theories.

Unsurprisingly, when I ran the 80 percent "factoid" by Kim Brace, a respected voting expert with the consulting firm Election Data Services, he called it "totally wrong."

Perhaps, as with voting itself, indictment of the voting system is an exercise better suited to print than to a screen. That way, viewers can more easily check the facts for themselves.

Justin Elliott is news editor at Talking Points Memo, and a former senior online fellow at Mother Jones.



 

Post a Comment

Your Name: 

Your Comment: 
 
Please press "Submit" only once to avoid double-posting.
All HTML formatting is removed from comments.
Read the Mother Jones community rules here.

Comments:

If you liked this film, you'll love "FREE FOR ALL!" It's an amazing election integrity film that touches on many of the same topics, and it's streaming for free at www.freeforall.tv.
Posted by:HeatherAugust 14, 2008 1:44:30 PMRespond ^
While I don't agree with every allegation in Uncounted, I wonder about the idea that the 80% factoid (the allegation that Diebold and ES&S equipment counted 80% of the votes in 2004) is "totally wrong."

The figure may be low.

ES&S alone has claimed 56% of the national vote in recent presidential elections:

http://www.aboutus.org/Essvote.com

"ES&S systems have counted approximately 56 percent of the U.S. national vote in each of the last four presidential and congressional elections, amounting to more than 100 million ballots cast in each election. In the election business for over three decades, ES&S today has over 400 employees located in eight regional U.S. offices and agents on five continents."

The above is what ES&S's site said after 2004. Here is what ES&S says about itself in 2008:


http://www.essvote.com/HTML/about/about.html

"Headquartered in Omaha, Nebraska, the company has been in the election business for more than three decades. Based on the primary voting tabulation system installed within the United States, our customers represent approximately 45 percent of the precincts and registered voters in the U.S. In addition to seven regional U.S. offices, ES&S has offices in the U.K. and Canada, and agents in several international locations."

About Diebold, the market share is very high. A state Secretary of State I speak to, and who is no fan of voting machine conspiracy theories, talks very comfortably of Diebold and ES&S having over 90% market share.

I would ask Election Data Services for a precise breakdown of which vendors' equipment counted the nation's votes in 2004.

Re the Republican ties, we know that one of ES&S's major investors was a campaign treasurer for a Republican US Senator's re-election campaign, and that the same Senator was CEO of ES&S in its previous incarnation, American Information
Systems:

http://www.aboutus.org/Essvote.com

We know that Diebold's former CEO Wally O'Dell was enough of a Republican to be a leading fundraiser for Bush in Ohio in 2004 (and most Ohio counties did not use Diebold in 2004).

This doesn't prove any past conspiracy - at all. But it should make us think about the future, and the need for verified elections.
Posted by:Keep Paying AttentionAugust 14, 2008 9:17:02 PMRespond ^
The link regarding the Republican ties of ES&S is not correct in my comment above. Here is the link I intended to post:

http://www.votingindustry.com/ About_Us/newsitems/Salon_com%2 0Technology%20%20Hacking%20democracy.htm

Harris quickly found that ES&S was owned, in part, by a merchant banking holding company called the McCarthy Group and that the firm's chairman, Michael McCarthy, was Chuck Hagel's campaign treasurer. After searching news archives, Harris found that during Hagel's first campaign, in 1996, the Nebraska media reported that he had been president of ES&S -- which at the time was called American Information Systems -- between 1992 and 1995. But the articles suggested that Hagel was no longer affiliated with the voting equipment company. Harris saw election records that showed Hagel still holding between $1 million and $5 million worth of stock in McCarthy, which owned about 25 percent of ES&S.
Posted by:Keep Paying AttentionAugust 14, 2008 9:31:57 PMRespond ^
While I applaud critical and accurate efforts at keeping documentaries and such clean of error, I am disappointed that Mother Jones here is seen as basically using a ploy most commonly seen used by Fox etc; find one factoid to rebut, then wipe, or give the impression of completely wiping, the integrity of the entire piece. Thats Shameful. Whats worse, is the "Newspeak" like technique of planting the "conspiracy" banner as a prompt way of evoking Pavlovian Mind Shut, causing most brain washed folk to no longer read.

The labeling of Conspiracy has been long used by Bernay / Freudian technique users to stop all discourse, trivializing and demonizing discussion that in many instances if accurate.

Conspiracy is all around us, everyday, in most human interactions. Our Very Declaration of Independence was written by people involved in Conspiracy.
Posted by:XBarbarianAugust 15, 2008 2:52:16 PMRespond ^
while the accuracy of the facts in the film may be in dispute at least the film makers are adressing the issue. I believe that a valid discussion of disenfranchisement needs to be discussed and addressed. considering the importance of this election and with what has occured in recent history this cannot be ignored or lumped in with conspiracy theories.
Posted by:Derick PolkAugust 15, 2008 3:12:53 PMRespond ^
So, you discredit one source because it was tied to “right wing” stuff and credit another source, EDS, which has it's own checkered past...then never even bother to fact check for yourself. So if it isn't 80%, then what is it? Anyone can quote any soured. A reporter is supposed to look up the data themselves and communicate the truth.

Your review doesn't tell us anything about the movie good or bad. I can't even call it a review.

From my own searches, it seems ES & S, Diebold, and Sequoia do in fact control the vast majority of elections and they are all private companies. ES & S and Diebold founders are brothers. The fact that three PRIVATE companies have such a strong hold on our entire countries elections and we all know about the prevalence of white collar crime, should raise the alarm bells right off the bat. It is pretty easy to buy someone off to swing an election your way.

Regardless if the number is 70% or 80%, it is irrelevant to all the issues raised in the movie, the known election fraud, and the fact the movie covers both Republicans and Democrats who are trying to do the right thing retaliated against.

I saw the movie. My only criticism would be the beginning focused too much on the Bush/Gore election and rehashed too much of the same stuff. It was from midway in to the end that the real meat of the movie took stage. Bruce Funk and Clint Curtis testimonies were the most interesting.

I attended with a group of Republicans and they enjoyed it as much as I did.

Mr. Elliot, you really did a disservice to your readers here by not doing a real review of the movie, and if you didn't like it, a true critical analysis of why you didn't like it instead of a stupid link to a group you oppose when you easily could have done a reporters job and checked into each county and the machines they use yourself.
Posted by:CheriAugust 15, 2008 4:02:24 PMRespond ^
Interesting that MOJO would publish such a bad piece of criticism. This is an important film, and while there are things I would have changed in the film, the documentation of most of the points alleged in the film have been thoroughly researched. This looks like another PTB ploy to discount information that will make us smarter and more able to work toward democracy. We have lived through 2 major coups and if we don't wake up, 2008 will be stolen also.
Posted by:Eliz77August 15, 2008 5:00:39 PMRespond ^
As a long-time subscriber to MoJo, I'm surprised at Justin E's negative comments about the docu "Uncounted" and also Free Press. I'm glad he's now a "former" fellow. I worked for a telemarketing company in 2002, and one of our assignments was calling people and asking for large donations for an organization to ship Jews from Russia to Israel. Fortunately, my second and last assignment was working for Judicial Watch where I learned about the Bush's ties with the Bin Laden family through the Carlisle Group.
Posted by:Katie RAugust 15, 2008 7:36:16 PMRespond ^
It's always a concern, when the company one "trusts" with counting the nation's votes is owned and run by someone who gives heavily to a particular party.

I'll go beyond that. The fact that CEO Wally O'Dell gives ANY amount to ANY political candidate should disqualify his company from counting our votes. They ought to be counted by the organs of government.

Poll workers are excused, if they display any partisanship while serving their mandated functions. A voter cannot wear a candidate's name on a button or t-shirt, or hold a campaign placard on the sidewalk outside the polling place. And yet, the maker of the machines that count our votes can be contributing to one party's candidate?
Posted by:Dan MortensonAugust 16, 2008 9:46:53 AMRespond ^
Um...MJ, it looks like you need to ride herd even on your film reviewers!

This guy's idea of research is to surf the web and find fault, but never to go find the answer for himself. If he's going to pan the number, he's got an obligation to the reader to find the real story. Otherwise, he should find some other aspect of the film to comment on.

Ride herd on these guys- or are you maybe having editing (editor) problems?
Posted by:Dan MortensonAugust 16, 2008 9:51:23 AMRespond ^
I like Greg Palast's (the American BBC reporter) reporting on election fraud. His books and reporting are practically flawless. It is revealing that magazines like MoJo always act as if they've never heard of such people, or themselves can't or don't watch excellent reporting on TV such as that of Amy Goodman, as if they've never interviewed her, or even heard of her or her many guests.

What is silly about both the review of the film (above), as well as the film itself, is that people are arguing (nitpicking is more like it) about something which is quite obvious to anyone who has kept up with politics in the past million years.

The very fact that exit poles during the Kerry-Bush election were WIDELY off the mark (as in LIKE-NEVER-BEFORE-IN-THE-HISTORY OF THE WORLD), especially in heavily Hispanic populated areas, (and this was even reported by big media, albeit brushed aside) should at least be a starting point . . . or a finishing one.

And of course, we've all heard of Florida and Ohio . . . and read and seen many documentaries dealing in detail with these two (of many) situations (assuming we haven't been living 1 million feet under the ground for the past 10 years.)

The problem with MoJo is the problem with the Democratic Establishment, both those who hold office and those who vote
for them ("the straight ticket-ers") - they will always be more concerned with appearances that with realities, and never really care about the latter.

That is why we had the genocides in East Timor and Guatemala, why we still have an insane drug war and not harm-reduction policies, and why the military-industrial complex has never been in fear of its survival.

It isn't that I find fault with those who enjoy their leisurely lives - only that they pretend to care when they really don't.

Still, it is better than having nothing but Republican fascists in office, that's for sure!
Posted by:LBCAugust 17, 2008 1:07:17 PMRespond ^
As the filmmaker for UNCOUNTED, I was surprised to see that critic Justin Elliott failed to actually review our film in his article for Mother Jones. Instead, he spent almost the entire piece on one text graphic that quite literally took up just a few seconds of an 80 minute film. I guess I need to work on my filmmaking because it appears that Mr. Elliott slept through the rest of the movie.

Had he actually watched the film, he could have written about the eyewitness accounts we had from whistleblowers - backed up by election experts - that revealed electronic voting machine security breaches, vote count manipulation, and illegal behavior by a major voting machine manufacturer which all threaten the integrity of our elections. He might also have written about the story of a computer expert who testified under oath that he was asked by a now-sitting congressman to program a voting machine to "flip votes" from one candidate to another. Or he might have written about one of any number of Democrats, Republicans, business leaders, elected officials, and rank and file voters we featured who are part of a growing movement in America that recognize, and are working hard to fix, an election system gone bad.

Instead, Mr. Elliott, using a tactic out of a hyper-partisan's playbook, chose to try and discredit the entire film by presenting his one sources' opinion as fact. The reality is that by 2004 our elections had been privatized to such a degree that it had become detrimental to the democratic process.

ES&S's own website claims its company alone "counted approximately 56% of the vote in each of the last four presidential and congressional elections." (http://www.aboutus.org/Essvote.com.)

And a Diebold spokesman told veteran journalist and election integrity expert Lynn Landes that they had counted 35% of the total vote in the 2002 election. (http://onlinejournal.com/evoting/042804Landes/042804landes.html)

Journalist Bob Fitrakis, who has written two books and numerous articles investigating irregularities in the 2004 election, adds an additional perspective:

"When you say that 80% of the votes in 2004 were counted by Diebold and ES&S, I think that is actually a conservative figure. You have to remember that it's not just the voting machines with secret software that count our votes. It's also the central tabulators where the final counting is done. And these central tabulators are also owned by private companies, like Diebold and ES&S."

And, according to Robert Kennedy in his landmark Rolling Stone Magazine investigative report "Will the Next Election Be Hacked?", it hadn't gotten that much better by 2006:

"The United States is one of only a handful of major democracies that allow private, partisan companies to secretly count and tabulate votes using their own proprietary software. Today, eighty percent of all the ballots in America are tallied by four companies - Diebold, Election Systems & Software (ES&S), Sequoia Voting Systems and Hart InterCivic." (Robert F. Kennedy Jr., "Rolling Stone", September 21, 2006)

I'm worried, as are most of the people who have seen UNCOUNTED in the 35 cities I have traveled to with the film since last January, about the integrity of our elections, particularly as we look ahead to November. And so Mr. Elliott's unwillingness to examine all the issues presented in UNCOUNTED was a real disservice to Mother Jones readers. Further, his typical corporate media response - which has always been to laugh, roll their eyes, or throw spitballs and move on - could spell disaster for our democracy.

David Earnhardt
Director, Producer & Writer
UNCOUNTED: The New Math of American Elections
Posted by:David EarnhardtAugust 17, 2008 1:36:06 PMRespond ^
"That way, viewers can more easily check the facts for themselves"...

Um, Justin, did you try that yourself, or did you look up just that one assertion and call it a day?

If this is what passes for film reviews at MJ, perhaps you shouldn't bother.
Posted by:txgirlAugust 19, 2008 11:39:35 PMRespond ^
I think the 4th paragraph in Mr. Elliott's 'expose' only exposes his own agenda.
dutchman
Posted by:dutchmanAugust 21, 2008 12:56:19 PMRespond ^
How much was Elliot paid for this reveiw? It is perhaps the world's laziest "review" in the history of film review. Elliot cherry picks one statement (a few seconds) out of a long film, asks his single source from the corporate side of the struggle for his opinion, and calls it a done deal. Elliot then makes the excuse that it is too difficult for him to check the facts when they are presented on film rather than on paper. What a crock! Mother Jones is rolling in her grave. To regain MJ integrity the current publishers should educate themselves and write a retraction.

The vote is the foundation of democracy. To allow private corporations to count the vote with proprietary software is insane! Too bad Elliot doesn't understand that simple concept.
Posted by:Ska-TAugust 22, 2008 1:51:36 PMRespond ^
This review is shocking in its ignorance and bias. I doubt the real Mother Jones would tolerate such reactionary denial and stupidity.
Posted by:David LasagnaAugust 22, 2008 6:23:10 PMRespond ^
Justin Elliott should no better than to try and pass off Kim Brace's opinion as critical analysis.
Posted by:brownbuffaloAugust 23, 2008 4:41:38 PMRespond ^
Okay, so I should know better than to write "no better" . .
Posted by:brownbuffaloAugust 23, 2008 4:44:18 PMRespond ^
This "review" is terrible and something I would expect to see at foxnews.com. It is statistically impossible for the exit polls in both 2000 and 2004 to be off by as much as they allegedly were. If there were over 31,000 respondents and it was a very empirical question: "Who did you just vote for?", and Kerry wins by 3.0%---then he cannot possibly lose by 2.8%! The votes were "flipped". It is scientifically impossible. And please don't tell me the one about "shy Republicans"---the evidence said the opposite was slightly true.
Posted by:KeithAugust 24, 2008 9:45:03 AMRespond ^
Why does Mother Jones have this pattern of running sing-them-to-sleep articles concerning the issue of election irregularities? The unsupported quote is bad enough, but the guilt-by-association smear is totally heinous.
Posted by:Joseph BrennerAugust 26, 2008 1:17:30 PMRespond ^
Regardless of any other arguments why on Earth are individual companies allowed to make machines for electronic balloting and no independant body (like the UN or some international outfit) being requested to supervise them. This is a huge alarm bell and the fact that no paper tickets are issued.. come on!!
In the best Orwellian tradition the only safe assumption is that there is flying corruption going on - any proper system worth it's salt would have implemented standardised machines and remove the controversy. It's so easy to do that - in the way that gaming machines in Casinos have to conform to checks.
You can talk about allegations and associations all you like but this is the pivotal matter for me - the fact that there are no excuses for unchecked technology. A dimwit could see what was going on! And until they bring in such a rigourous system there will continue to be controversy.
Posted by:Stephen McCormackSeptember 11, 2008 5:54:02 PMRespond ^
I just suffered through this documantary. Oh yes, I better mention this, I am a registered independent voter. I have no ties to either political party in this country. I hang up the phone on an even basis when pollsters from both parties call me. The thing that bothered me was the Gahanna, Ohio supposed conspiracy they brought up where the mistake, caught days after the election, had Bush receiving 4,258 votes in a precinct in the Columbus suburb of Gahanna, where only 638 voters cast ballots. They forgot to mention that it was corrected and the corrected official count shows 365 votes for Bush and 273 went to Kerry. The only thing I can figure out with American Elections, is that Republicans cannot win close elections, without the election being a fraud. The Democrats only accept defeat if it is landslide. Maybe? I am becoming more and more disenfranchised with the Democartic Party, due to the extreme left activists that have taken it over based on irresponsible conspiracy theories.
Posted by:BrianOctober 25, 2008 8:39:05 AMRespond ^

Jail.org - Inmate Search
Criminal records, instant public records & people search & current court records. www.jail.org

U.S. Public Records Search
Search County & State Court Records, Criminal records, Vital and Adoption Records www.PublicRecordsInfo.com

Records.com - People Search
Public Records and Background Checks. Instantly Search Criminal Records, Addresses and Court Records www.Records.com

Court Records & County Records
Find Instant Public Records, Criminal Records as Well as County Property Records Search. www.PublicRecordsIndex.com

Real Viagra, Cialis Levitra Deal
Dare to compare our competitive prices. Free overnight delivery to new patients in the US. No catch 22!

Bob's Red Mill Organic Flaxseed Meal
In addition to its great nutty flavor, our flaxseed meal is high in fiber and packed with essential Omega-3 Fatty Acids.

PEACEFUL HOLIDAY GIFTS
Items featuring the 1958 peace symbol shirts, buttons, hoodys, signs, stickers, pins...more.
union made • detroit peacebuttons.info

End the genocide in Darfur
Every day, Darfuris face rape, murder, and starvation. Be a Voice for Darfur: tell Obama to end the suffering.
















Blowback

Recession Dating

Afghanistan

The Greening of America


More MoJo voices...



bookIN PRINT

CLICK HERE
for more great reading

headphones IN TUNE
New music every issue

CLICK TO LISTEN

Advertise Liberally

This article has been made possible by the Foundation for National Progress, the Investigative Fund of Mother Jones, and gifts from generous readers like you.

© 2008 The Foundation for National Progress

About Us   Support Us   Advertise   Ad Policy   Privacy Policy   Contact Us   Subscribe   RSS