Amid calls for recount, election experts ask: Why not audit the vote?
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Green Party candidate Jill Stein has raised more than enough money for a recount in three critical Rust Belt states that narrowly handed Donald Trump the presidency amid what she called a 鈥渉ack-riddled election.鈥
Meanwhile, unwilling to concede a loss in North Carolina, Republican Gov. Pat McCrory claims fraudulent votes gave his opponent, Attorney General Roy Cooper, the win on Election Day.
Both gambits are highly unlikely to sway the outcome, election experts say, given scant evidence to support the fraud claims.
The fact that candidates on different sides of the political divide are unwilling to accept the results shows how divisive the 2016 election was and that more could be done to elevate Americans' confidence in the electoral system. Some election experts say regularly auditing voting machines would both provide safeguards against emboldened hackers and improve voter peace of mind.
鈥淓xamining the physical evidence in these states 鈥娾撯 even if it finds nothing amiss鈥 鈥撯 will help allay doubt and give voters justified confidence that the results are accurate,鈥 J. Alex Halderman, director of the University of Michigan Center for Computer Security and Society, . The computer security expert has shown that some American voting machines can, in fact, be hacked.
A series of high-profile hacks of the Democratic National Committee, which the FBI has said it suspects were done by Russian hackers, also has given some traction to calls for additional safeguards.
A 'hopeless goal?'
Stein raised more than $4 million in three days, in large part from disgruntled Clinton voters eager to blame conspiracy rather than voter sentiment for what became a stunning Election Day loss to Mr. Trump.
"We have voting machines that are extremely hack-friendly in an election that's been very contentious,鈥 Ms. Stein explained on Wednesday, while acknowledging there was no "smoking gun."
Concerns were raised by a team of researchers that included Halderman, which found discrepancies in some of the key Wisconsin counties won by Trump. That鈥檚 significant because Trump鈥檚 victory margin remains razor-thin in all three states: Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan. Recount efforts would have to overturn all three states, however, for Clinton to prevail. And Halderman himself wrote that the discrepancies could also be explained by bad polling.
FiveThirtyEight鈥檚 Nate Silver sounded a skeptical note, suggesting that the results 鈥渁re well-explained by demographics 鈥 not hacking.鈥
Tellingly, the Clinton campaign has remained silent on Stein鈥檚 recount gambit. For one, the hacking complaints are ironic, given that Democrats condemned Trump for his frequent complaints about a 鈥渞igged鈥 election.
In that way, Stein鈥檚 protest 鈥渄irects liberal anger toward a hopeless goal and 鈥 [f]eeds into a Russian story line 鈥 that American democracy is awfully flimsy,鈥 writes David Weigel in .
But others argue such audits should be standard operating procedure."[A] statistical audit of electronic voting results in key states as a routine safeguard 鈥 not just an emergency measure 鈥 would be a surprisingly simple way to ease serious, lingering doubts about America鈥檚 much-maligned electoral security,鈥 writes Andy Greenberg .
The case in North Carolina
In North Carolina, Governor McCrory is fighting headwinds in his allegations that a broader voter conspiracy put Mr. Cooper over the top. McCrory, a Republican who rose to the national spotlight after signing the state鈥檚 controversial 鈥渂athroom bill鈥 into law, is more than 7,000 votes behind. Despite that margin, he is demanding a recount.聽鈥淲e found several dozen voters who are on parole or in prison who have voted,鈥 McCrory strategist Chris LaCivita told the Post. 鈥淭here鈥檚 dead people who have voted. There鈥檚 people who have double-voted.鈥
But preliminary analyses suggest that at least one list of supposedly fraudulent voters was largely wrong: Most of the names listed as ineligible were found to be valid voters. County election boards, run by Republicans, have also found little evidence of voter wrongdoing. McCrory then asked the state election board to take over the investigation.
As with Stein鈥檚 appeal, there鈥檚 a heavy fog of politics and sour grapes in the air. Some have accused McCrory of trying to steal the election by invoking a state law allows the legislature to anoint a governor in a 鈥渃ontested鈥 election, and bars anyone from suing in state courts over such a decision.
The willingness to invoke the potential of fraud has, to some extent, dovetailed with emerging cyberthreats to ring fresh alarm bells about the US voting system.
At the very least, recent hacks of the Democratic Party and state voter registration systems suggest that those keen to disrupt the US system are probing its defenses. 鈥2016 has seen unprecedented cyber-attacks aimed at interfering with the election,鈥 Halderman writes.
Suggested reforms include bolder safeguards against insider wrongdoing, more federal funding to upgrade aging voting machines, and, critically, automatic paper-trail audits. About 70 percent of US voting machines leave a paper trail, but randomized checks are done only upon request.
鈥淚t is vital that we protect voters from the real threats to the integrity of elections,鈥 Myrna Perez, a law professor at the New York University School of Law, wrote in a . 鈥淔ortunately, it is possible to protect election integrity without disenfranchising eligible voters.鈥