Ohio's first election without punch card ballots was marred by a slew of problems with new voting machines, raising a crucial question: Can the state that decided the last presidential race get it together before November? Election officials had trouble printing ballot receipts, finding lost votes and tabulating election results in Tuesday's primary. Some election workers were late or did not show up at all in Cleveland's Cuyahoga County, the state's largest. Others could not figure out how to turn on the machines.
``Ohio's quickly getting this reputation as most corrupt and maybe most incompetent,'' said Chris Link, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio, which fielded dozens of complaints from voters. Tuesday's primary was the first in which all 88 counties used either touch-screen machines or devices that scan ballots marked by voters. Glitches were reported across the state, and a few local races remained undecided Wednesday while counting continued. The number of outstanding votes was too small to affect races for governor, Congress and statewide offices.
Columbus attorney Cliff Arnebeck, who handles voting-rights cases, said many of the problems were expected. ``You could see in the absence of adequate training, people could just screw up,'' he said. Cuyahoga County was searching for memory cards holding votes from 74 polling locations. Spokeswoman Jane Platten said the cards might have been left in machines, but she would not discuss details, citing security concerns. The county had reported results from about 93 percent of precincts by midday Wednesday. Matthew Damschroder, elections chief in Franklin County, encompassing Columbus, defended the training of poll workers but said additional instruction would be offered before November. ``We've had poll workers with the old system who after 10 years still made mistakes,'' Damschroder said. ``It's going to be a learning curve no matter what we do.''
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The worst problems in Ohio appeared to be in Cuyahoga County, where officials resorted to paper ballots after touch-screen machines failed and about 17,000 absentee ballots were being hand-counted. David Bear, spokesman for Diebold Inc., which supplied Cuyahoga's machines, said ovals on the ballots printed by the county did not line up properly for optical-scan machines to read them, he said.more
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