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The Arizona House voted yesterday to pass Senate Concurrent
Resolution 1037, setting official requirements for the use of
electronic voting machines in the state and banning the use of
some.
The resolution passed in the Arizona Senate on March 6 by a vote
of 16-13.
On Thursday, March 30, The Arizona House joined the Senate and
voted 31-27 in favor. This resolution will bypass the Governor and
go directly to the Secretary of State’s office. If the Secretary of
State and Arizona Counties do not comply with this new rule, the
Legislature can and likely will sue.
originally posted by: derfreebie
If I get this right, a joint resolution in AZ also can't be vetoed by Governor
Katie, she's out of the loop evidently.
originally posted by: gb540
First, does anyone make a 100% domestic voting machine?
Second, I haven't read the entire legislation, but is there a requirement that ALL schematics and source code be made publicly available? A domestic black box is no better than an imported black box!
I'm no Luddite but IMO voting machines should be banned altogether.
I can't find anything confirming this, would be great if true, because she will definitely veto it if she can.
So should central counting locations.
Moving ballots is where lots of cheating happens.
Nothing should leave any voting place.
Elections need to be re-compartmentalized 😎
originally posted by: Boadicea
a reply to: tanstaafl
In theory and in principle, yes, if done correctly, the State Legislatures have the Constitutional power, authority, and duty to establish election laws and protocols. The governor does not have to be involved at all.
originally posted by: Boadicea
a reply to: Ahabstar
LOL -- I'd definitely trust school kids more than this bunch of critters in office... actually, make that ANY bunch of critters in office!