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E-voting is too important to leave to politicians

Rupert Goodwins ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 05 Nov 2003 14:55 GMT

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So why bother? There is no question that a properly implemented e-voting system can be more accurate than a paper system: not perfect, but better. It can also be much more convenient, if the many caveats about phone and Internet voting are assuaged. You can also tie in a lot of the other aspects of democracy -- informed debate, access to historical information and access to the politicians -- which is currently filtered through the thoroughly unopen partisan monsters of the media.

But wait, as they say on QVC. There's more. Electronic voting has the potential to transcend the physical and political boundaries that we fondly assume are laws of nature, just because they've always been like that. To take one example: the decisions of the President of the United States affect me and you directly, wherever we are in the world. Sometimes the effects are as obvious as a cruise missile demolishing the house next door: more often, the nature of the influence is hidden away in trade agreements and other political deals. As Quinn told the Wired reporter: "After all, we've all got a stake in who's in the White House these days. I'm actually prone to think that the rest of the world should get a vote in your elections."

That won't happen in my lifetime: the US, like the UK, has enough problems getting its own citizens to vote. But a proper, audited, open electronic voting system could be run by anyone, not just the politicians who incidently also run the countries. Done right, there would be no question of opinion poll-style bias or rigging: it could run in parallel with national elections or other events of importance. Although there'd be no legal requirement for anyone in power to take account of the results, any system that could reliably deliver the true opinion of masses of people will inevitably influence those who rely on their official votes -- and it would act as a fascinating counterweight in situations where the official ballot is questioned.

As Churchill said, democracy is the worst form of government except for all the others. Nobody in their right mind would invent our current political environment from scratch, even if its current denizens profess to like it. Freed of its artificial constraints and the random limits placed by history and special interests on the limits of our democratic voice, the evolution of an international e-voting system may be the only way to reflect the changing nature of our increasingly interconnected world. Truly open systems aren't just there to look at, they're open for anyone to use. We don't need anyone's permission: we just have to make it so.

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