Restoring Confidence in American Elections

Hoover Institute

The Hoover Institute published a paper, Restoring Confidence in American Elections, in June 2024. Distinguished Visiting Fellow Ben Ginsberg and Stanford professor Bruce Cain wrote it. The paper explores “the polarization in American election views. It also analyzes where common ground might be found to bring divided factions together.” 

As an old political science major, I was interested in what they had to say, even though Hoover was considered “conservative.”

“The core division over election reform is often now characterized as ‘fraud versus suppression,’ and the partisan gap on this issue is wider today than in the past. Public faith in the accuracy of US elections is currently at an historic low, with more than 30 percent of the population doubting the accuracy of elections. If unaddressed, this could severely undermine the US political system and its form of government, which is rooted in the peaceful transfer of power… ” Several surveys in recent years, including from the Ad Council (2023), confirm this.

“Evidence from the MIT Election Data and Science Lab backs this up [finds] that voters are mostly unaware of the many complex and specific procedures that election administrators follow.  In some instances, the procedures voters thought would give them more confidence in the election process were already in place.” As a poll worker in 2021, I was impressed by the training beforehand and the intentional redundancy in the counting process. Fraud would be extremely difficult to introduce into the system.

“The current legitimacy crisis over US elections may be more reflective of what voters learned from news coverage, social media, and online sources of information than what they personally experienced.” Or, I would posit, lies told by certain candidates and their surrogates.

Damn federalism!

“The decentralized delegation to the states of many procedural details for state and federal elections means that voters are often surprised to learn that other states have different rules. More than ten thousand jurisdictions are responsible for the casting, counting, and certification of their
communities’ votes.” It IS convoluted.

“The United States’ strong federalist structure may also be a contributing factor to the rise of convenience voting, an increasingly popular but controversial method of balloting. Because the United States has so many elections at all levels of government, voters in many states must
fill out very long and complicated ballots… Understandably, many citizens now prefer the convenience of voting at home and dropping the ballot off at a voting center, rather than navigating the long lines while waiting for other people to work their way through the lengthy list of choices on
Election Day.” 

Certain districts also had longer lines, and while some states allow time off to vote, others do not.

“The growing partisan divide on voting rules is also reflected in the pattern of new voting law proposed by each party in the states… Democrats generally propose laws that provide more opportunities for people to vote with fewer requirements, whereas Republicans prefer laws that provide more checks to make it harder for potentially ineligible individuals to vote. The result is significantly more litigation over election laws, as well as a ramping up of partisan campaign rhetoric over “fraud” or “suppression” in get-out-the-vote messaging, all of which contribute to more partisan polarization in the country as a whole.”

Both sidesism

There’s a degree of “both sides” in the argument, which I disagree with.

I admit I’m suspicious of Texas Republicans who are accused of intimidation. The homes of members of the United States’ oldest Latino civil rights organizations were raided over voter fraud claims.

More problematic in terms of the 2024 presidential election involves Georgia. “In a series of meetings in July and August, the Georgia State Election Board voted 3-2 to change the rules governing local election boards. (The three members voting to change the rules all deny that Joe Biden won Georgia in 2020, despite the complete lack of evidence for that view. Trump has given them a shout-out at a political rally. When was the last time a national candidate paid any attention to a state election board?)” If the vote is as close as it was in 2020, expect chaos.

Most infuriating, How Tennessee Keeps Nearly Half a Million People From Voting. “While nearly all states suspend or withdraw people’s right to vote when they are convicted of felonies, most allow restoring that right after they have served their sentences…  But Tennessee has moved in the opposite direction, making the process significantly more difficult. (Think: bureaucratic maze from hell.) About 9 percent of the state’s voting-age population is prohibited from voting because of felony convictions.”

Solutions

I’m skipping over the Common Myths section of the Hoover argument, which is interesting but not pivotal. The authors list reasonable suggestions, albeit difficult to achieve.

Enact Legislation to Better Secure the Safety of Election Officials
and Poll Workers

Encourage Greater Uniformity in Electoral Practices through Evidence-Based Assessments of Both Participation and Security Impacts. “The issue should be viewed on two levels. One is differences between the states, which are perhaps inevitable given our history not only in matters involving elections but also in many other matters of governance. More solvable is the lack of uniformity among jurisdictions within a single state, which also causes confusion and, therefore, an erosion of confidence in elections.” Yes. “Uniformity in the administration of a state’s laws and standardization of electoral systems within a state’s jurisdictions could lead to a vast increase in public confidence in elections.”

Outreach to the Public on Voting Administration Should Be Targeted, Tested, and Coordinated

Reliable

Develop Bipartisan “Standards of Reliability” to Reassure the Public of the
Accuracy of Elections. This has several components.  Absentee ballot / mail-in ballot validation measures. Prompt reporting of election results. Easily available mail/early voting (no excuse). National voter ID (including one-time initial proof of citizenship for all current voters, available at no cost). Online voter registration. Notice and cure of defective ballots. Drop boxes monitored with video. Voter roll maintenance – a BIG problem. Multistate database to check duplicate voter registrations.

Also: Absentee ballot applications to all voters but not live ballots. No ballot harvesting – I TOTALLY agree with this. Paper trail for all ballots. Postelection risk-limiting audits. Observers allowed in polling places and where votes are tabulated – “Observers should be required to attend a training session to familiarize themselves with the jurisdiction’s processes so they can better understand what they observe.” Adequate funding for elections. Protection for election officials. 

Finally

Here’s the conclusion: “Some might conclude that these examples of plausible initial steps of bipartisan election administration are too small and that reform efforts should go big or go home. That would be fine if the country were not deeply polarized and bipartisan consensus was not so difficult to achieve. Cross-party reforms necessarily involve negotiation and building trust by finding the most obvious points of agreement first. Continuing down a path that undermines public faith in democratic institutions is not an acceptable option. Even if small steps do not address
the underlying problems associated with strong federalism or overly partisan officials, they would be a valuable start toward changing the negative direction of contemporary American citizen culture.”

I think it’s a useful document. Coordinating information among the states seems particularly difficult, but the rationale for it makes sense. But what do you think we can/should do to Restore Confidence in American Elections?

Losing my grammar grouch badge

scandally clad

I have been losing my grammar grouch badge. Frankly, I never really embraced the title. As early as 1972, when the first issue of Ms. magazine came out- I purchased it right away – I realized the efficacy of using the word Ms. as opposed to Miss or Mrs., in comparison with the term Mr.

I’ve embraced variations on you. Newish takes on they/them make a lot of sense to me.

Part of my learning on the topic comes from being around my wife, who taught English as a New Language, formerly known as English as a Second Language. Among other things, I realized that English is difficult and irrational; often, it doesn’t make much sense.

Actually, I knew that well before that, certainly by the time I first saw Dr. Seuss’s book The Tough Coughs As He Ploughs the Dough.

I have been listening to a lot of YouTube videos by RobWords. He takes on some of the weird variations in the language, looking at the historical as well as the current usage. He explains, for instance, in The Great Vowel Shift, why certain words that look like they should rhyme do not. (When I was doing Wordle recently and was trying to find words ending in ROWN, I immediately picked up brown, crown, drown, and frown but missed grown because it doesn’t rhyme.) Certainly, somebody who isn’t a native speaker would have real difficulty with that.

Punctuation

Still, I remember back in 2005 when a bunch of bloggers were new to me. One of them, a very smart guy, had a terrible time comparing the word its and the word it’s. Without him asking, I made it my mission to gently, firmly, and repetitively explain the difference. BTW, it did not work. I now look back at that with a certain degree of, “Boy, was I arrogant,” along with “Why are you bothering to do this?”

More recently, some folks online were lamenting that young people don’t end their sentences with a period/full stop. It wasn’t this 2021 article, but the sentiment was the same.  The subtitle: To younger people, putting a period at the end of a casually written thought could mean that you’re raring for a fight.

“To younger generations, using proper punctuation in a casual context like texting can give an impression of formality that borders on rudeness, as if the texter is not comfortable enough with the texting partner to relax. The message-ending period establishes a certain distance… Simply put, the inclusion of a formality in casual communication is unnerving.

“Think of a mother using her son’s full name when issuing a stern ultimatum.”

I didn’t say this, but I should have included that in this space of acronyms (LMAO, TY): We older folks are non-native speakers. We should at least try to speak their language, as I practiced my rudimentary French in 2023 when I was in western France.

“Every generation tends to loathe to some extent the way the generation after them speaks.”

Oh, John Green muses over Which is Correct? — or – ? And why not?

Whereforartthou

RobWords asked, Where did punctuation come from?

He makes a very good case that spaces between words are punctuation marks. Unlike the Greeks and Romans, who had to read breakeless texts mumbling aloud like a modern six-year-old, spaces and other punctuation made texts more comprehensible. We can thank, in part, the proselytizing by early Christians.

I’m pretty lax about apostrophes. Some believe the apostrophe used to show possession is a shortening of John his horse to John’s horse. This is probably not true.

“In Old English, you just stuck an S on the end of a noun to reference it as belonging to someone with no apostrophe needed.”

If you want to use a word to show the possession of the house owned by the Joneses, I don’t care if they use JONES or JONESES, with or without the apostrophe, But the one thing that does make me crazy is when they use JONE’S; you never break into the word.

Acorns, er, eggcorns
In the video, Are you getting these phrases wrong, too? | EGGCORNS, RobWords commends the linguistic skill of these linguistic pioneers.
“Decimate” now means to destroy by well greater than ten percent.  I’m okay with that.
Rob has several words that bug his readers the most, and I fully agree with their choices. The current use of unique with a comparative (more unique) grates on me.

Facebook takedown

This was ticking me off

facebookFor the second time in three days, on September 4 (re music at Chautauqua) and 6 (re my health issues), I received, within ten minutes of posting, a Facebook takedown: 
We removed your post
Updates on this decision
You’ll hear back from us soon
Thanks for requesting a review. We’ll let you know when we’ve made a decision. Most people hear back in less than 4 days, but it can take longer.
Sep 6, 2024
In review
Why this happened
It looks like you tried to get likes, follows, shares or video views in a misleading way.

Roger Owen Green
Sep 6, 2024
You shared this on your profile
This goes against our Community Standards on spam.
See rule
Policy Rationale

We do not allow content that is designed to deceive, mislead, or overwhelm users in order to artificially increase viewership. This content detracts from people’s ability to engage authentically on our platforms and can threaten the security, stability and usability of our services. We also seek to prevent abusive tactics, such as spreading deceptive links to draw unsuspecting users in through misleading functionality or code, or impersonating a trusted domain.

Online spam is a lucrative industry. Our policies and detection must constantly evolve to keep up with emerging spam trends and tactics. In taking action to combat spam, we seek to balance raising the costs for its producers and distributors on our platforms, with protecting the vibrant, authentic activity of our community.

What you need to know

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By following the rules, you can help prevent your content being removed, activity restricted, or your account being suspended.
Information you shared with us in your review.
This post doesn’t break the rules
It was to raise awareness
Review submitted: Sep 6, 2024
https://transparency.meta.com/policies/community-standards/Facebook takedown
By the way, (and not that it proves anything), I’ve posted the same items on Twitter with no issues. And I took the SAME content of those posts, put it on another blog, and posted it on FB without a problem. 
I can post things to my FB, such as my Connections score, other people’s art, and a COVID PSA. 
Has Facebook decided I’m not a bot? My 9/7 and 9/8 posts received no challenge, though I never got the Facebook thumbs-up to restore the two challenged posts. Or did something malicious attach to those posts? I don’t think so. The folks at Dreamhost checked.
Dealing with it consumed time that had been previously allocated.

Sunday Stealing: 15 Questions

iptical olasion

This iteration of Sunday Stealing was purloined from a site called 200 Questions, but there are only 15 questions. If they steal another 15 questions, I don’t know WHAT I’ll call that post.

1. What shows are you into?

CBS Sunday Morning, 60 Minutes, Abbott Elementary, JEOPARDY! I record a lot of stuff but don’t get around to watching it. So when people say, “You should watch…” I nod knowingly. But I know I’m not going to add it to the queue.

2. What’s your claim to fame?

I suppose #1 is being on JEOPARDY! in 1998. Also, as my friend ADD noted recently,  “August 28th marked the anniversary of the opening of the legendary FantaCo Enterprises, a wondrous and much-missed comic book store in Albany, NY,” where I worked from 1980 to 1988. This decade, people STILL recognize me. Somehow, I’ve become the keeper of the FantaCo flame.

3. How often do you play sports?

Not all. I used to play racquetball regularly from 1983 to 2010, when the local Y closed.

4. Are you early or late?

I used to be late, but you can’t be late when you take buses. So unless I’m with someone who is late, I’m slightly early.

5. What quirks do you have?

See this blog, 2005-2024. I like to say certain words and phrases incorrectly, such as iptical olasion instead of optical illusion. Sometimes I can break into speaking like an old black minister.  The music I play has a particular order, tied to artists’ birthdays, holidays, award shows and the like.

People

6. How often do you people watch?

Constantly. On Friday, I went to the Capital District Transportation Authority office to get a new bus pass. The guy in line in front of me wanted a discounted card because he has Medicaid. He went into copious detail about how he had been in Denver and Reno, but he never got a license when he was there because he didn’t live there long enough. While he dug through his belongings, the woman helped me, but the card took about five minutes to print. So she helped the guy while finding some assistance for the people behind me who needed bus route info. Then she came out and gave me my card, my ID, and the $3 of change I was due; she was a very well-organized worker!

7. What’s your favorite drink?

A mix of cranberry and orange juice.

8. What do you hope never changes?

I have no expectations of things never changing.

9. What’s your dream car?

A self-driving vehicle powered by solar panels and stored battery energy.

10.  Where would you rather be from?

I was where I was supposed to be.

11. What songs have you completely memorized?

Lots, but The Boxer by Simon and Garfunkel immediately came to mind. But not that lame verse: “After changes upon changes, We are more or less the same.”

12. What would you rate 10/10

Massage

13. What job would you be terrible at?

Repairman

14. What skill would you like to master?

Time management

15. What movie title best describes your life?

Defending Your Life

1974 country and AC: LOTS of #1 hits

lots of pop/AC crossover

Just as in the primary Billboard singles charts, the sheer number of 1974 country and adult contemporary #1 hits is astounding.  There were 40 #1 country hits. I like doing these chart posts, but not THAT much.

So I will only list the ones that charted for two or more weeks. I’ve noted I Can Help recently and wrote about it in 2015.

Skipping the one-week #1 country songs means I miss several well-known songs. Dolly Parton has four songs in the category, including Jolene and I Will Always Love You.

A Very Special Love SongCharlie Rich, three weeks at #1; #1 for two weeks AC, #11 pop

The rest of the list was #1 for two weeks:

I Love – Tom T. Hall, #2 AC, #12 pop

Another Lonely Song – Tammy Wynette

There Won’t Be Anymore – Charlie Rich; #15 AC, #18 pop

He Thinks I Still Care –  Anne Murray; I’m surprised it didn’t cross over because I heard it a lot in the day

Rub It In – Billy “Crash” Craddock; #15 AC, #16 pop

Please Don’t Tell Me How The Story Ends – Ronnie Milsap; #95 pop

I See The Want To In Your Eyes – Conway Twitty

Adult contemporary

There were 34 AC #1 hits in 1974. Once again, I’m ignoring the ones that were #1 for a single week. I already listed A Very Special Love Song today. 

Annie’s Song and Sunshine On My Shoulders by John Denver; I Honestly Love You by Olivia Newton-John; The Way We Were by Barbra Streisand;  Love’s Theme by Love Unlimited Orchestra; TSOP (The Sound of Philadelphia) by MFSB featuring The Three Degrees; Sundown by Gordon Lightfoot;  Feel Like Makin’ Love – Roberta Flack;  Laughter In The Rain by- Neil Sedaka; and Mandy – Barry Manilow were listed last month.

Last Time I Saw Him – Diana Ross, three weeks at #1; #14 pop, #15 RB 

The rest of the list was #1 for two weeks:

Keep On Singing – Helen Reddy; #15 pop

You Won’t See Me – Anne Murray; #8 pop

Back Home Again – John Denver, #5 pop, #1 CW for one week

Ramblin' with Roger
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