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Election Reform: Is the Cure Worse than the Disease?

October 29th, 2009 by Margaret Martin

ballotEarlier this month, the Center of the American Experiment released a report, entitled “No Longer a National Model: Fifteen Recommendations Fixing Minnesota Election Law and Practice.”The report, authored by American Experiment Senior Fellow Dr. Kent Kaiser with the input of numerous (but unnamed) contributors, criticizes aspects of the election system in Minnesota and proposes solutions for some of the problems seen in recent days, especially in the lengthy and controversial recount process in the 2008 US Senate race.

The fifteen proposals have already been lauded by the Pioneer Press and Politics in Minnesota. Many of the proposals are no-brainers. For example, it’s unacceptable that “Military absentee ballots were 16 times more likely to be rejected and that most of them were rejected because they were received after Election Day.” Logistical problems and a tight schedule from primary to election day in Minnesota are to blame. Another example: (although the debate often carries a partisan edge) the inability to verify voters at the polls with something as simple as a photo ID requirement is a problem. Allowing voters who vote absentee to “verify” their ballots as valid by running them through a test machine seems like a reasonable idea, although the ability to do that doesn’t seem like it would help people mailing in ballots, especially from afar. Yet another example: checking to make sure that people aren’t voting in multiple states. If somebody applies for a drivers’ license in another state, the license in the other state is automatically cancelled. Why not the voter registration? Many of the technical solutions being proposed are sound and simple and one may ask why haven’t they been proposed before? One suggestion is already on the table. Senator Al Franken has just submitted a bill to Congress requiring states to grant at least 45 days for overseas ballots to be issued and returned.

There are other suggestions that may generate more controversy.  Not, as you might imagine given the Center’s conservative bent, with liberals who might find changes to be a handicap to access, but rather to conservatives and libertarians who might well ask, how do these suggestions fit with constitutional principles? We are talking about a basic element in our democratic government, one that defines it, gives it is shape and credibility.

Center of the American Experiment President Mitch Pearlstein provides a response to that question in his foreword. “…while the explicit purpose of most of the previous investigations was to apply conservative and free market tests to what the government does, the explicit purpose this time around has been to have nothing whatsoever with anything ideological—be it right, left, sideways –as conducting elections which command the trust of citizens is of an entirely different order.”

Nice try, but it’s a cop out. Political Science 101 teaches us that ideology is embodied in institutions. That’s true if you are a libertarian, a Marxist or a feminist. When we tinker with the mechanics of something as fundamental as an election, we need to pay even greater attention to the messages we send and the behaviors we incentivize and judge them according to whether they conflict with and undermine or help to translate constitutional principles in light of new problems and possibilities.
Returning to the question of the photo ID for voters–yes, it is controversial on the left, as a “barrier to voting.” ( Let’s leave aside for a moment it is nearly impossible to live in the modern world without being able to acquire and present a photo ID of some sort, whether to drive, to purchase certain classes of items or to conduct even the smallest of financial transactions.) Civil libertarians are critical of any sort of government controlled and mandated ID card where data is collected on an individuals’ movements or tagged with other personal identifiers. Dr Kaiser’s characterization of the use of such an ID is not likely to put their fears to rest:

“A quick swipe of a photo ID through a card reader could fill in the data fields in the state’s voter registration system, thereby eliminating common data-entry mistakes that take place with the current pen and paper registration system. A quick swipe of such ID at the sign-in-table in the polling place on Election Day would eliminate the need to line up by parts of the alphabet, would conserve thousands of pounds of paper currently used to print voter rosters in every election, and would greatly speed up the lines in polling places. It would also eliminate the need for post-Election Day data entry of voter participation history, which after the 2008 election took several months and cost county governments tens of thousands of dollars to complete.”

There is obviously a tradeoff in cost, convenience and the integrity of the vote vs. having to present a “swipeable” government ID with a yet to be determined amount of personal data. But we aren’t looking at “ideology” so privacy concerns and civil rights concerns are not considered here.

Another of the more controversial aspects of the report is likely to be how many of the solutions to the current problems boil down to “centralizing” the process at the state level. Historically, cities and counties (local units of government) have controlled elections. This is not merely a practical matter but a reflection of local governance and local control enshrined in the constitution. The suggestions:

  • No more SOS political appointments—election workers (other than ground level election judges) are all state employees
  • No more partisan appointments to State Canvassing Board—make appointed administrative law judges members, who are state employees
  • Centralized administration of foreign ballots
  • Barcoding and central processing of ballots
  • Instituting a provisional ballot system for voters without ID on election day, checked centrally
  • Requiring recounts to be done at a central location

The experience of elections in other countries where democracy is challenged suggests that ballot fraud takes many forms. There is localized fraud, where the town political bosses fail to accurately count ballots. There is regional fraud, where ballot boxes go “missing” (or wires get crossed) on the way to the centralized counting and there is national fraud, where the central electoral council announces a result and manufactures a paper trail later. Centralizing ballot counting is no guarantee of fraud elimination. In fact, it makes fraud on a massive scale, more possible if not more likely. In the case of a state like Minnesota, one need not even imply that the fraud could be intentional. A small mistake at the local level would involve a minimal number of ballots and would be less likely to throw an entire election and elections system in disrepute. A mistake on the state level would be, by definition, systemic and could be catastrophic.

Dr. Kaiser admits that there is a limit to how insulated even a “professional” government employee can be with this vignette from the 2008 Senate recount, in the “drama” of the “missing ballots:”


…the drama involved in getting these “missing” ballots counted, in spite of their apparent non-existence, was viewed as partisan. This suspicion was fueled by the fact that the Director of Elections in Minneapolis at first explained how there might never have been ballots to back up the numbers indicated on the ballot scanner from the precinct in question. Later we were distressed to witness the City of Minneapolis Director of Elections seeming to buckle under partisan influence….

The Deputy Director of Elections in Minneapolis at the time was Cindy Reichert, an employee of the city of Minneapolis. If she could be susceptible (or be perceived to be susceptible) to “partisan” pressure, why would a state employee not feel the heat in a hotly contested state legislative or gubernatorial race, which arguably holds more portent for their conditions of employment than a U.S. senate race would have been for Ms Reichert? State employees are not devoid of associations. They may belong to parties, political groups, churches and unions. There is no state version of the Federal Hatch Act that prevents state employees from participating openly in politics. With partisan appointees to the Secretary of State’s office, at least, we may guess at the affiliation of the appointees and if bias is evident, it may be confirmed and overruled. By demanding that career bureaucrats staff the office, we’ve merely thrown a cloak over any bias by assuming it away.

There is a constitutional solution for many of these problems. It was built into the original design. If the party system is competitive, control over the Secretary of State’s office is bound to alternate. If no party expects to control the office permanently, then competition should keep them honest and cause them not to act in any way that they could pay the price for, down the road, when they are no longer in power. Another constitutional principle, accountability, would prevent any future political appointee or their minions from engaging in any significant abuse that could be exposed. In order to have accountability, there is a great need for transparency in the Secretary of State’s office, for procedures to be visible and understandable to the voter, from the handing of a ballot to and from the voter to the result on election night. Robust competition and the intense scrutiny it fosters is the solution, not placing the entire office into the hands of mandarins.

Remembering Rose Friedman

August 20th, 2009 by Margaret Martin

roseThis past week, Rose Director Friedman, economist, co-author and wife of Dr. Milton Friedman died at her home in California. She was believed to be 98 (no birth records exist for the village she was born in, in what is now the Ukraine). The Friedman Foundation has this to say about her passing. Minnesota Free Market Senior Policy Fellow King Banaian wrote the following remembrance:

Alongside

I was at a meeting this afternoon, a start of a new year for a volunteer board with new people, and as an ice-breaker we were to draw slips of paper with one of three questions. The one I drew was, who would you like to have dinner with most, but with the condition that that person is deceased. Given the events of the day, I could not think of anyone but Rose Friedman, who had died earlier in the day.

She was an accomplished economist of her own when she agreed to marry Milton, having worked on projects in Washington and New York relating to banking and bonds for new institutions like the FDIC and the National Bureau of Economic Research. She delayed their wedding until she had finished the Washington part of her FDIC work. And yet, in Two Lucky People, she wrote that following her husband was to be her lot, and one she gladly accepted.

Although we both started our life together as economists, there was a difference. From the beginning, I never questioned whose career came first. I left my job at the FDIC because I have never wanted a part-time marriage and Milton was not interested in a Washington career. When we left New York for Wisconsin [where he took an academic post before WW2 --kb], I gave up my job. In part this attitude on my part was probably a reflection of the times. Women’s lib was not yet on the horizon. Few married women with families had full-time careers that involved being away from their families most of the day. … Both Milton and I felt strongly that when we had a family, which we were anticipating, my primary career would be as a mother; the economist would come second.

In addition, in all of life’s activities, the personal element is crucial. From the beginning, I have never had the desire to compete with Milton professionally (perhaps because I was smart enough to recognize that I couldn’t). On the other hand, he has always made me feel that his achievement is my achievement. In an interview for the San Francisco Sunday Examiner on March 18, 1984, I was asked, as I often am, how I deal with the fact that we do not share equally in the popular limelight. My answer: “Fortunately, I was not born with a strong competitive gene, so his fame is our fame. I will never be a Nobel laureate, but I am very proud to be the wife of one. In addition, he is more gregarious and outgoing and less self-conscious than I, so he is better suited for the limelight.” (p. 87)

It is noteworthy that many of Milton’s greatest work, Free to Choose, Tyranny of the Status Quo, and Capitalism and Freedom, all bore her name as well as his. You read in Two Lucky People that it was Rose that encouraged Milton to follow through in making Free To Choose as a PBS series over his misgivings, encouraging him not to compromise on the idea that the American people, and eventually the world, was ready for a real intellectual argument for freedom. I left reading their memoirs thinking that the phrase “behind every great man stands a great woman” did not apply to them. She stood alongside.

The cover of Free to Choose has “Winner of the Nobel Prize” below his name and before hers. She never wanted it any differently. They will now share the limelight in eternity, their names forever together.

crossposted from SCSU Scholars

Health Care Critics: An “Angry Mob” or “Expressing Their Concerns”?

August 4th, 2009 by Margaret Martin

health careThe health care debate is generating some press as members of congress hit their home towns with Town Halls. As some of the discussions have become heated, commentators are complaining that critics are promoting irrational fears and not engaging in serious debate.

Hyperbole aside, there are serious issues being raised by many ordinary citizens about the wide scope and massive changes that Congress and the President are considering making to how Americans receive their health care and how it is paid for.
Here are some stories to consider:

If Bill Doesn’t Pass, The Heat’ll Kill You Says AP

June 25th, 2009 by Margaret Martin

Climate Change ReconsideredThe Associated Press has evidently taken a vacation this week and simply printed a press release from The Union of Concerned Scientists about the dangers of Global Warming they say will occur if the Waxman-Markey Climate Change and Cap and Trade Bill is not passed. The Concerned Scientists list all of the adverse events that could occur if temperatures rise up to 12 degrees hotter in Minnesota.  Missing from the AP’s account (which just happens to coincide with a heat wave in Minnesota) is an actual discussion of whether Global Warming is actually happening, if it is part of larger natural cycles or is in fact caused by human activity.  For that (and more), you would need to go and read the Non-Governmental International Panel on Climate Change Report.  Also left unmentioned is whether you are more likely to die of heat exposure or to be taxed to death by some of the Climate Change Proposals.

The Minnesota Political Contribution Refund

June 23rd, 2009 by Margaret Martin

MN Department of RevenueThe “PCR” as it is known has become a flashpoint among the various Republican candidates and pre-candidates for Governor in the upcoming 2010 election as some have urged their supporters to give and collect their refund from the state before it expires on July 1. (Under the current budgetary crisis, Governor Pawlenty used “unallotment” to recapture those funds for other priorities.) Other candidates have told their supporters not to rush to donate refunded money because it undermines that re-prioritization to get more taxpayer money for political campaigns.

Back in March, 2009, Minnesota Free Market Institute Senior Policy Fellow Craig Westover had this to say:

[Tim] Utz was the 2008 GOP candidate for state representative in district 50A, Columbia Heights, a seat that was won by DFLer Carolyn Laine. Utz, however, has reason to run again.

“So many elected officials at the Minnesota state level, Democrats and Republicans alike, continue spending our taxes, restricting our personal liberties and creating ever greater heavy hand of government,” writes Utz on his campaign site.”The result is an endless gorging of Minnesota tax payer’s dollars and intrusion in our lives. Party affiliation fails to draw any real distinction when considering electing leadership in Saint Paul. Year after year the state government continues expanding to the point where few if any elected officials today understand the proper or legal function of State government.”

If the GOP is going to revitalize the brand of being the “Party of Principle,” accepting that it has been part of the problem is the first step to becoming part of the solution. Standing on principle means accepting the consequences of where principle leads. Consider the Political Campaign Refund law, which rebates $50 to individuals and $100 to couples for campaigns to political parties. The GOP platform calls for abolishing the Political Campaign Refund. The PCR reform was at one time one of 1,704 measures we could not live without. Utz, however, thinks we can, at least he can. He was one of only four GOP candidates that did not solicit PCR money to fund a campaign.

What Good Government Looks Like

May 28th, 2009 by Margaret Martin

Hennepin County Commissioner Jeff Johnson was elected last year and began his term in January. He’s already figured out that County Government has one of the most sweeping powers to levy taxes and yet has the least transparency and accountability of any level of government in how it spends taxpayer money because much of its activity goes unreported in the media. In a bid to rectify that in his own county, Johnson has decided to blog about his experiences and what he finds at Hennepin County Taxpayer Watchdog. Watch this space.

Soak the Rich is not a Good Long Term Strategy

May 26th, 2009 by Margaret Martin

The Wall Street Journal has a story today on the experience of Maryland, which  created a “millionaire” tax bracket to capture additional tax revenue from a top 6.35% marginal rate.  (Link here, subscription may be required) A year later, 1/3 of Maryland’s millionaires have vanished from the rolls.  While it’s entirely possible that many of these millionaires disappeared due to the stock market and real estate crashes, it will be interesting to see how many individuals changed their residency or moved out of state to more tax-friendly climes.   The article notes that Maryland’s wealthy are more likely to own property in states with lower taxes, even nearby ones like Virginia, making escape not only possible but easy.  Such will probably not be the case for working families when the tax increases fall on them to make up for the flight of the rich.

“Storm the Capitol” Rally on Monday, May 18th at 5:30 PM

May 14th, 2009 by Margaret Martin

stormsite 

 

 

 

 

Join the Budget Hawks as we rally against veto overrides, tax increases and special sessions. The eleventh hour is is typically when deals get cut and your money gets spent.

Lets remind legislators that goverment also has to live within it’s means!

No one’s life, liberty or property is safe while the legislature is in session!

Time to get the job done and turn off the lights!

For a pdf copy to print as a double copy flyer click here.

State’s New “TAP-MN” Website a Small First Step Toward the Goal of Transparency.

April 23rd, 2009 by Margaret Martin

Governor Tim Pawlenty and Minnesota Management and Budget unveiled the new “Transparency and Accountability Minnesota Project” website last month. According to the TAP-MN front page, the website “provides a powerful new way for the public to access information about state government spending. “ Governor Pawlenty himself heralded the site by saying, “Taxpayers are paying the bills and they should have the ability to easily look at the state’s checkbook.”

The TAP-MN site is a database of state expenditures with a front end that allows a user to search by vendor, spending category, source of funding and state agency as well as narrow their search by other parameters like the year of the expense.

It has its limitations. The first one is the URL. http://www.mmb.state.mn.us/tap Got that? Better bookmark it because it’s not easy to remember. Other states like Nebraska have come up with convenient URLs like http://nebraskaspending.com/ . Do you use a browser other than Microsoft Internet Explorer? Too bad, the TAP-MN website will not work for you. Also, once you get on the site, you will find that that some spending is hidden due to “privacy” issues most notably, checks issued to individuals.

Another problem is that since we do not yet have consistent transparency down to the local government level, when the state sends checks to local government, the trail goes cold for citizens interested in what local governments are doing with their state tax dollars. Some cities and counties are better than others in reporting their budgets in detail. Some do only the minimum required by law. There are other quasi-government entities with limited fiscal reporting requirements, such as “development corporations” and “port authorities.” Opacity rather than transparency is a better descriptor at those levels of government.

Digging around in the vendor reports it’s easy to see that there are probably inconsistencies in how the books are kept and how spending is reported at the lowest levels of government. For example, a professor at the U might have their membership to the American Academy of Poets paid for through a reimbursement or by directly submitting the membership invoice. The TAP database would pick up the latter method but the former? That would probably be black boxed as a payment to a private individual. Antiquated accounting methods at the beginning of the process probably don’t help TAP-MN live up to the ideal of “transparency.”

Still, for budget hawks, a consideration is that many hands make light work. When the public is given access to the information contained in the TAP-MN website, a bright light will shine in many dark corners for many different reasons. Say you own a pizza joint. You can look up your competitors as vendors on the TAPS-MN website to see if they are getting catering gigs from state government. If you are not getting them, you can ask why and perhaps prepare a competitive bid. That may disrupt a few sweetheart deals that vendors have been getting in the past but it is a big win for taxpayers, the state budget, competition and transparency in government.

Government Mandate Creates Dirty Dishes and a Black Market for Detergent

March 31st, 2009 by Margaret Martin

Are dirty dishes in our future? If so, you can thank yet another government scheme to make us all greener that doesn’t give any thought to the consequences of mandating unproven technologies and making individuals pay more for less. (See “low flow” toilets that don’t flush, Mercury filled compact florescent bulbs and stinky front load washing machines for previous examples).

A ban on some types of dishwashing detergent has turned some Spokane, WA residents into black marketers and smugglers according to a story in the Associated Press:

They are bringing Cascade or Electrasol in from out of state because the eco-friendly varieties required under Washington state law don’t work as well. Spokane County became the launch pad last July for the nation’s strictest ban on dishwasher detergent made with phosphates, a measure aimed at reducing water pollution. The ban will be expanded statewide in July 2010, the same time similar laws take effect in several other states.

Minnesota is one of those states.

Excessive Phosphates cause overgrowth of algae in lakes and streams. But here’s the problem: phosphates occur in nature and cause seasonal algae blooms when trees shed their leaves and plants decay. Even in possession of this information, the state legislature went ahead and enacted a ban on Phosphate lawn fertilizers in 2002 anyway. This report from the MN Department of Agriculture shows that the law did little more than establish a government funded education campaign on lawn care. Predictably, it has had little effect on water quality.

For people with lawns, fortunately there are a variety of alternatives in lawn care. And it turns out that many people were probably over fertilizing their lawns anyway. In the dishwasher detergent case, low phosphate washing products are less effective at cleaning dishes. One person interviewed in the article says that when he uses the eco-friendly detergent, he has to put his dishwasher on a higher setting, which uses more water in order to get his dishes clean.

The government creates more expense for the producers of these products; hassle for the consumer, increases in government spending for the taxpayer to shoulder and at the end of the day, there is little or no benefit to the supposed goal of creating a cleaner environment.

Plenty of inconveniences but not a whole lot of truth.

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