Complete video at: http://fora.tv/2008/06/30/Norman_Ornstein_The_Election_System_in_America
Former Chairman of the Federal Election Commission Trevor Potter discusses concerns and controversies over electronic voting machines in the run-up to the 2008 Presidential election.
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Norman Ornstein discusses The Election System in America with Trevor Potter, as a part of Restoring Legitimacy to Our Election System during the 2008 Chautauqua Institution morning lecture series.
Trevor Potter is a member in Caplin & Drysdale's Washington, D.C. office, where he leads the firm's Political Activity Law Practice. He is one of the country's best-known and most experienced campaign and election lawyers, and a former Commissioner (1991-1995) and Chairman (1994) of the Federal Election Commission.
He currently serves as General Counsel to the John McCain 2008 campaign and held that position with the McCain 2000 campaign. He was also Deputy General Counsel of the Bush 1988 campaign. Mr. Potter is the founding President and General Counsel of the Campaign Legal Center, a Washington, D.C. based nonprofit which assisted in the legal defense of the McCain-Feingold law on behalf of the Congressional sponsors. He is currently on leave from that position.
Mr. Potter is also a non-resident Fellow at the Brookings Institution. He has published several books and articles in the field, including: Political Activity, Lobbying Laws and Gift Rules Guide (West Publishing, Third Edition 2008, Second Edition 1999); The New Campaign Finance Sourcebook, Brookings Institution, 2005; Federal Election Law and the Internet, Brookings Institution, 2000; and The Campaign Finance Sourcebook, Brookings Institution, 1997 ; and He is a frequent guest speaker at a variety of professional meetings, has testified before Congress on federal election proposals and campaign finance regulation, and has taught campaign finance law at the University of Virginia School of Law and Oxford University. He is Chair of the Election Law Committee of the American Bar Association's Administrative Law Section, and liaison to the Standing Committee on Election Law of the ABA.
The state, city /town, and federal governments
should now ban voting machines because
they cause voters nothing but technical problems.
All of the states in America need to return to paper
voting. Paper voting is better than machine election.
lilacmay4 1 year ago
okay I take my last comment back, if they are going to be corrupt there is nothing that will stop them.
Delishful 2 years ago
why don't they just make some scratch card voting slips, when people vote they can scratch the panel to reveal a random number, all the slips could then be scanned in to the machines after being collected from the boxes, people could then use the net to check whether their vote was counted and if it was correct. because it would be random and nobody would know who had what number everyone would be able to check if at least their vote was correct.
Delishful 2 years ago
I remember - so what?
hattovonhatzfeld 3 years ago
no matter who u vote for this electronic machine was bult by bush family so the 2008 winner is john mccain , remember what I said
MadelnJapan 3 years ago
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ketsia10 3 years ago
z orny? hehe visit my profile for a good time y
ewaars 3 years ago
Doesnt everyone remember the b.s. that went on with the Florida "recounts" in 2000?
enojon73 3 years ago
I agree. The only way to prevent a "Bushwhacking" like we had in 2000 is to bring back the paper ballot.
enojon73 3 years ago
hahaha soo true!
WORMNY77 3 years ago