|
A
quiet revolution is taking place in US politics.
By the time it's over, the integrity of elections
will be in the unchallenged, unscrutinised control
of a few large - and pro-Republican - corporations.
Andrew Gumbel wonders if democracy in America
can survive.
-
- Something
very odd happened in the mid-term elections
in Georgia last November. On the eve of the
vote, opinion polls showed Roy Barnes, the incumbent
Democratic governor, leading by between nine
and 11 points. In a somewhat closer, keenly
watched Senate race, polls indicated that Max
Cleland, the popular Democrat up for re-election,
was ahead by two to five points against his
Republican challenger, Saxby Chambliss.
-
-
- Those
figures were more or less what political experts
would have expected in state with a long tradition
of electing Democrats to statewide office. But
then the results came in, and all of Georgia
appeared to have been turned upside down. Barnes
lost the governorship to the Republican, Sonny
Perdue, 46 per cent to 51 per cent, a swing
of as much as 16 percentage points from the
last opinion polls. Cleland lost to Chambliss
46 per cent to 53, a last-minute swing of 9
to 12 points.
-
- Red-faced
opinion pollsters suddenly had a lot of explaining
to do and launched internal investigations.
Political analysts credited the upset - part
of a pattern of Republican successes around
the country - to a huge campaigning push by
President Bush in the final days of the race.
They also said that Roy Barnes had lost because
of a surge of "angry white men" punishing
him for eradicating all but a vestige of the
old confederate symbol from the state flag.
-
-
- But
something about these explanations did not make
sense, and they have made even less sense over
time. When the Georgia secretary of state's
office published its demographic breakdown of
the election earlier this year, it turned out
there was no surge of angry white men; in fact,
the only subgroup showing even a modest increase
in turnout was black women.
-
-
- There
were also big, puzzling swings in partisan loyalties
in different parts of the state. In 58 counties,
the vote was broadly in line with the primary
election. In 27 counties in Republican-dominated
north Georgia, however, Max Cleland unaccountably
scored 14 percentage points higher than he had
in the primaries. And in 74 counties in the
Democrat south, Saxby Chambliss garnered a whopping
22 points more for the Republicans than the
party as a whole had won less than three months
earlier.
-
-
- Now,
weird things like this do occasionally occur
in elections, and the figures, on their own,
are not proof of anything except statistical
anomalies worthy of further study. But in Georgia
there was an extra reason to be suspicious.
Last November, the state became the first in
the country to conduct an election entirely
with touchscreen voting machines, after lavishing
$54m (£33m) on a new system that promised
to deliver the securest, most up-to-date, most
voter-friendly election in the history of the
republic. The machines, however, turned out
to be anything but reliable. With academic studies
showing the Georgia touchscreens to be poorly
programmed, full of security holes and prone
to tampering, and with thousands of similar
machines from different companies being introduced
at high speed across the country, computer voting
may, in fact, be US democracy's own 21st-century
nightmare.
-
-
- In
many Georgia counties last November, the machines
froze up, causing long delays as technicians
tried to reboot them. In heavily Democratic
Fulton County, in downtown Atlanta, 67 memory
cards from the voting machines went missing,
delaying certification of the results there
for 10 days. In neighbouring DeKalb County,
10 memory cards were unaccounted for; they were
later recovered from terminals that had supposedly
broken down and been taken out of service.
-
-
- It
is still unclear exactly how results from these
missing cards were tabulated, or if they were
counted at all. And we will probably never know,
for a highly disturbing reason. The vote count
was not conducted by state elections officials,
but by the private company that sold Georgia
the voting machines in the first place, under
a strict trade-secrecy contract that made it
not only difficult but actually illegal - on
pain of stiff criminal penalties - for the state
to touch the equipment or examine the proprietary
software to ensure the machines worked properly.
There was not even a paper trail to follow up.
The machines were fitted with thermal printing
devices that could theoretically provide a written
record of voters' choices, but these were not
activated. Consequently, recounts were impossible.
Had Diebold Inc, the manufacturer, been asked
to review the votes, all it could have done
was programme the computers to spit out the
same data as before, flawed or not.
-
- Astonishingly,
these are the terms under which America's top
three computer voting machine manufacturers
- Diebold, Sequoia and Election Systems and
Software (ES&S) - have sold their products
to election officials around the country. Far
from questioning the need for rigid trade secrecy
and the absence of a paper record, secretaries
of state and their technical advisers - anxious
to banish memories of the hanging chad fiasco
and other associated disasters in the 2000 presidential
recount in Florida - have, for the most part,
welcomed the touchscreen voting machines as
a technological miracle solution.
-
-
- Georgia
was not the only state last November to see
big last-minute swings in voting patterns. There
were others in Colorado, Minnesota, Illinois
and New Hampshire - all in races that had been
flagged as key partisan battlegrounds, and all
won by the Republican Party. Again, this was
widely attributed to the campaigning efforts
of President Bush and the demoralisation of
a Democratic Party too timid to speak out against
the looming war in Iraq.
-
-
- Strangely,
however, the pollsters made no comparable howlers
in lower-key races whose outcome was not seriously
contested. Another anomaly, perhaps. What, then,
is one to make of the fact that the owners of
the three major computer voting machines are
all prominent Republican Party donors? Or of
a recent political fund-raising letter written
to Ohio Republicans by Walden O'Dell, Diebold's
chief executive, in which he said he was "committed
to helping Ohio to deliver its electoral votes
to the president next year" - even as his
company was bidding for the contract on the
state's new voting machinery?
-
-
- Alarmed
and suspicious, a group of Georgia citizens
began to look into last November's election
to see whether there was any chance the results
might have been deliberately or accidentally
manipulated. Their research proved unexpectedly,
and disturbingly, fruitful.
-
-
- First,
they wanted to know if the software had undergone
adequate checking. Under state and federal law,
all voting machinery and component parts must
be certified before use in an election. So an
Atlanta graphic designer called Denis Wright
wrote to the secretary of state's office for
a copy of the certification letter. Clifford
Tatum, assistant director of legal affairs for
the election division, wrote back: "We
have determined that no records exist in the
Secretary of State's office regarding a certification
letter from the lab certifying the version of
software used on Election Day." Mr Tatum
said it was possible the relevant documents
were with Gary Powell, an official at the Georgia
Technology Authority, so campaigners wrote to
him as well. Mr Powell responded he was "not
sure what you mean by the words 'please provide
written certification documents'".
-
- "If
the machines were not certified, then right
there the election was illegal," Mr Wright
says. The secretary of state's office has yet
to demonstrate anything to the contrary. The
investigating citizens then considered the nature
of the software itself. Shortly after the election,
a Diebold technician called Rob Behler came
forward and reported that, when the machines
were about to be shipped to Georgia polling
stations in the summer of 2002, they performed
so erratically that their software had to be
amended with a last-minute "patch".
Instead of being transmitted via disk - a potentially
time-consuming process, especially since its
author was in Canada, not Georgia - the patch
was posted, along with the entire election software
package, on an open-access FTP, or file transfer
protocol site, on the internet.
-
-
- That,
according to computer experts, was a violation
of the most basic of security precautions, opening
all sorts of possibilities for the introduction
of rogue or malicious code. At the same time,
however, it gave campaigners a golden opportunity
to circumvent Diebold's own secrecy demands
and see exactly how the system worked. Roxanne
Jekot, a computer programmer with 20 years'
experience, and an occasional teacher at Lanier
Technical College northeast of Atlanta, did
a line-by-line review and found "enough
to stand your hair on end".
-
- "There
were security holes all over it," she says,
"from the most basic display of the ballot
on the screen all the way through the operating
system." Although the programme was designed
to be run on the Windows 2000 NT operating system,
which has numerous safeguards to keep out intruders,
Ms Jekot found it worked just fine on the much
less secure Windows 98; the 2000 NT security
features were, as she put it, "nullified".
-
-
- Also
embedded in the software were the comments of
the programmers working on it. One described
what he and his colleagues had just done as
"a gross hack". Elsewhere was the
remark: "This doesn't really work."
"Not a confidence builder, would you say?"
Ms Jekot says. "They were operating in
panic mode, cobbling together something that
would work for the moment, knowing that at some
point they would have to go back to figure out
how to make it work more permanently."
She found some of the code downright suspect
- for example, an overtly meaningless instruction
to divide the number of write-in votes by 1.
"From a logical standpoint there is absolutely
no reason to do that," she says. "It
raises an immediate red flag."
-
-
- Mostly,
though, she was struck by the shoddiness of
much of the programming. "I really expected
to have some difficulty reviewing the source
code because it would be at a higher level than
I am accustomed to," she says. "In
fact, a lot of this stuff looked like the homework
my first-year students might have turned in."
Diebold had no specific comment on Ms Jekot's
interpretations, offering only a blanket caution
about the complexity of election systems "often
not well understood by individuals with little
real-world experience".
-
-
- But
Ms Jekot was not the only one to examine the
Diebold software and find it lacking. In July,
a group of researchers from the Information
Security Institute at Johns Hopkins University
in Baltimore discovered what they called "stunning
flaws". These included putting the password
in the source code, a basic security no-no;
manipulating the voter smart-card function so
one person could cast more than one vote; and
other loopholes that could theoretically allow
voters' ballot choices to be altered without
their knowledge, either on the spot or by remote
access.
-
- Diebold
issued a detailed response, saying that the
Johns Hopkins report was riddled with false
assumptions, inadequate information and "a
multitude of false conclusions". Substantially
similar findings, however, were made in a follow-up
study on behalf of the state of Maryland, in
which a group of computer security experts catalogued
328 software flaws, 26 of them critical, putting
the whole system "at high risk of compromise".
"If these vulnerabilities are exploited,
significant impact could occur on the accuracy,
integrity, and availability of election results,"
their report says.
-
-
- Ever
since the Johns Hopkins study, Diebold has sought
to explain away the open FTP file as an old,
incomplete version of its election package.
The claim cannot be independently verified,
because of the trade-secrecy agreement, and
not everyone is buying it. "It is documented
throughout the code who changed what and when.
We have the history of this programme from 1996
to 2002," Ms Jekot says. "I have no
doubt this is the software used in the elections."
Diebold now says it has upgraded its encryption
and password features - but only on its Maryland
machines.
-
-
- A
key security question concerned compatibility
with Microsoft Windows, and Ms Jekot says just
three programmers, all of them senior Diebold
executives, were involved in this aspect of
the system. One of these, Diebold's vice-president
of research and development, Talbot Iredale,
wrote an e-mail in April 2002 - later obtained
by the campaigners - making it clear that he
wanted to shield the operating system from Wylie
Labs, an independent testing agency involved
in the early certification process.
-
-
- The
reason that emerges from the e-mail is that
he wanted to make the software compatible with
WinCE 3.0, an operating system used for handhelds
and PDAs; in other words, a system that could
be manipulated from a remote location. "We
do not want Wyle [sic] reviewing and certifying
the operating systems," the e-mail reads.
"Therefore can we keep to a minimum the
references to the WinCE 3.0 operating system."
-
-
- In
an earlier intercepted e-mail, this one from
Ken Clark in Diebold's research and development
department, the company explained upfront to
another independent testing lab that the supposedly
secure software system could be accessed without
a password, and its contents easily changed
using the Microsoft Access programme. Mr Clark
says he had considered putting in a password
requirement to stop dealers and customers doing
"stupid things", but that the easy
access had often "got people out of a bind".
Astonishingly, the representative from the independent
testing lab did not see anything wrong with
this and granted certification to the part of
the software programme she was inspecting -
a pattern of lackadaisical oversight that was
replicated all the way to the top of the political
chain of command in Georgia, and in many other
parts of the country.
-
- Diebold
has not contested the authenticity of the e-mails,
now openly accessible on the internet. However,
Diebold did caution that, as the e-mails were
taken from a Diebold Election systems website
in March 2003 by an illegal hack, the nature
of the information stolen could have been revised
or manipulated.
-
-
- There
are two reasons why the United States is rushing
to overhaul its voting systems. The first is
the Florida debacle in the Bush-Gore election;
no state wants to be the centre of that kind
of attention again. And the second is the Help
America Vote Act (HAVA), signed by President
Bush last October, which promises an unprecedented
$3.9bn (£2.3bn) to the states to replace
their old punchcard-and-lever machines. However,
enthusiasm for the new technology seems to be
motivated as much by a bureaucratic love of
spending as by a love of democratic accountability.
According to Rebecca Mercuri, a research fellow
at Harvard's John F Kennedy School of Government
and a specialist in voting systems, the shockingly
high error rate of punchcard machines (3-5 per
cent in Florida in 2000) has been known to people
in the elections business for years. It was
only after it became public knowledge in the
last presidential election that anybody felt
moved to do anything about it.
-
-
- The
problem is, computer touchscreen machines and
other so-called DRE (direct recording electronic)
systems are significantly less reliable than
punchcards, irrespective of their vulnerability
to interference. In a series of research papers
for the Voting Technology Project, a joint venture
of the prestigious Massachussetts and California
Institutes of Technology, DREs were found to
be among the worst performing systems. No method,
the MIT/CalTech study conceded, worked more
reliably than hand-counting paper ballots -
an option that US electoral officials seem to
consider hopelessly antiquated, or at least
impractical in elections combining multiple
local, state and national races for offices
from President down to dogcatcher.
-
-
- The
clear disadvantages and dangers associated with
DREs have not deterred state and county authorities
from throwing themselves headlong into touchscreen
technology. More than 40,000 machines made by
Diebold alone are already in use in 37 states,
and most are touchscreens. County after county
is poised to spend hundreds of millions of dollars
more on computer voting before next spring's
presidential primaries. "They say this
is the direction they have to go in to have
fair elections, but the rush to go towards computerisation
is very dubious," Dr Mercuri says. "One
has to wonder why this is going on, because
the way it is set up it takes away the checks
and balances we have in a democratic society.
That's the whole point of paper trails and recounts."
-
-
- Anyone
who has struggled with an interactive display
in a museum knows how dodgy touchscreens can
be. If they don't freeze, they easily become
misaligned, which means they can record the
wrong data. In Dallas, during early voting before
last November's election, people found that
no matter how often they tried to press a Democrat
button, the Republican candidate's name would
light up. After a court hearing, Diebold agreed
to take down 18 machines with apparent misalignment
problems. "And those were the ones where
you could visually spot a problem," Dr
Mercuri says. "What about what you don't
see? Just because your vote shows up on the
screen for the Democrats, how do you know it
is registering inside the machine for the Democrats?"
-
- Other
problems have shown up periodically: machines
that register zero votes, or machines that indicate
voters coming to the polling station but not
voting, even when a single race with just two
candidates was on the ballot. Dr Mercuri was
part of a lawsuit in Palm Beach County in which
she and other plaintiffs tried to have a suspect
Sequoia machine examined, only to run up against
the brick wall of the trade-secret agreement.
"It makes it really hard to show their
product has been tampered with," she says,
"if it's a felony to inspect it."
-
-
- As
for the possibilities of foul play, Dr Mercuri
says they are virtually limitless. "There
are literally hundreds of ways to do this,"
she says. "There are hundreds of ways to
embed a rogue series of commands into the code
and nobody would ever know because the nature
of programming is so complex. The numbers would
all tally perfectly." Tampering with an
election could be something as simple as a "denial-of-service"
attack, in which the machines simply stop working
for an extended period, deterring voters faced
with the prospect of long lines. Or it could
be done with invasive computer codes known in
the trade by such nicknames as "Trojan
horses" or "Easter eggs". Detecting
one of these, Dr Mercuri says, would be almost
impossible unless the investigator knew in advance
it was there and how to trigger it. Computer
researcher Theresa Hommel, who is alarmed by
touchscreen systems, has constructed a simulated
voting machine in which the same candidate always
wins, no matter what data you put in. She calls
her model the Fraud-o-matic, and it is available
online at www.wheresthepaper.org.
-
-
- It
is not just touchscreens which are at risk from
error or malicious intrusion. Any computer system
used to tabulate votes is vulnerable. An optical
scan of ballots in Scurry County, Texas, last
November erroneously declared a landslide victory
for the Republican candidate for county commissioner;
a subsequent hand recount showed that the Democrat
had in fact won. In Comal County, Texas, a computerised
optical scan found that three different candidates
had won their races with exactly 18,181 votes.
There was no recount or investigation, even
though the coincidence, with those recurring
1s and 8s, looked highly suspicious. In heavily
Democrat Broward County, Florida - which had
switched to touchscreens in the wake of the
hanging chad furore - more than 100,000 votes
were found to have gone "missing"
on election day. The votes were reinstated,
but the glitch was not adequately explained.
One local official blamed it on a "minor
software thing".
-
- Most
suspect of all was the governor's race in Alabama,
where the incumbent Democrat, Don Siegelman,
was initially declared the winner. Sometime
after midnight, when polling station observers
and most staff had gone home, the probate judge
responsible for elections in rural Baldwin County
suddenly "discovered" that Mr Siegelman
had been awarded 7,000 votes too many. In a
tight election, the change was enough to hand
victory to his Republican challenger, Bob Riley.
County officials talked vaguely of a computer
tabulation error, or a lightning strike messing
up the machines, but the real reason was never
ascertained because the state's Republican attorney
general refused to authorise a recount or any
independent ballot inspection.
-
-
- According
to an analysis by James Gundlach, a sociology
professor at Auburn University in Alabama, the
result in Baldwin County was full of wild deviations
from the statistical norms established both
by this and preceding elections. And he adds:
"There is simply no way that electronic
vote counting can produce two sets of results
without someone using computer programmes in
ways that were not intended. In other words,
the fact that two sets of results were reported
is sufficient evidence in and of itself that
the vote tabulation process was compromised."
Although talk of voting fraud quickly subsided,
Alabama has now amended its election laws to
make recounts mandatory in close races.
-
-
- The
possibility of flaws in the electoral process
is not something that gets discussed much in
the United States. The attitude seems to be:
we are the greatest democracy in the world,
so the system must be fair. That has certainly
been the prevailing view in Georgia, where even
leading Democrats - their prestige on the line
for introducing touchscreen voting in the first
place - have fought tooth-and-nail to defend
the integrity of the system. In a phone interview,
the head of the Georgia Technology Authority
who brought Diebold machines to the state, Larry
Singer, blamed the growing chorus of criticism
on "fear of technology", despite the
fact that many prominent critics are themselves
computer scientists. He says: "Are these
machines flawless? No. Would you have more confidence
if they were completely flawless? Yes. Is there
such a thing as a flawless system? No."
Mr Singer, who left the GTA straight after the
election and took a 50 per cent pay cut to work
for Sun Microsystems, insists that voters are
more likely to have their credit card information
stolen by a busboy in a restaurant than to have
their vote compromised by touchscreen technology.
-
-
- Voting
machines are sold in the United States in much
the same way as other government contracts:
through intensive lobbying, wining and dining.
At a recent national conference of clerks, election
officials and treasurers in Denver, attendees
were treated to black-tie dinners and other
perks, including free expensive briefcases stamped
with Sequoia's company logo alongside the association's
own symbol. Nobody in power seems to find this
worrying, any more than they worried when Sequoia's
southern regional sales manager, Phil Foster,
was indicted in Louisiana a couple of years
ago for "conspiracy to commit money laundering
and malfeasance". The charges were dropped
in exchange for his testimony against Louisiana's
state commissioner of elections. Similarly,
last year, the Arkansas secretary of state,
Bill McCuen, pleaded guilty to taking bribes
and kickbacks involving a precursor company
to ES&S; the voting machine company executive
who testified against him in exchange for immunity
is now an ES&S vice-president.
-
- If
much of the worry about vote-tampering is directed
at the Republicans, it is largely because the
big three touchscreen companies are all big
Republican donors, pouring hundreds of thousands
of dollars into party coffers in the past few
years. The ownership issue is, of course, compounded
by the lack of transparency. Or, as Dr Mercuri
puts it: "If the machines were independently
verifiable, who would give a crap who owns them?"
As it is, fears that US democracy is being hijacked
by corporate interests are being fuelled by
links between the big three and broader business
interests, as well as extremist organisations.
Two of the early backers of American Information
Systems, a company later merged into ES&S,
are also prominent supporters of the Chalcedon
Foundation, an organisation that espouses theocratic
governance according to a literal reading of
the Bible and advocates capital punishment for
blasphemy and homosexuality.
-
-
- The
chief executive of American Information Systems
in the early Nineties was Chuck Hagel, who went
on to run for elective office and became the
first Republican in 24 years to be elected to
the Senate from Nebraska, cheered on by the
Omaha World-Herald newspaper which also happens
to be a big investor in ES&S. In yet another
clamorous conflict of interest, 80 per cent
of Mr Hagel's winning votes - both in 1996 and
again in 2002 - were counted, under the usual
terms of confidentiality, by his own company.
-
- In
theory, the federal government should be monitoring
the transition to computer technology and rooting
out abuses. Under the Help America Vote Act,
the Bush administration is supposed to establish
a sizeable oversight committee, headed by two
Democrats and two Republicans, as well as a
technical panel to determine standards for new
voting machinery. The four commission heads
were supposed to have been in place by last
February, but so far just one has been appointed.
The technical panel also remains unconstituted,
even though the new machines it is supposed
to vet are already being sold in large quantities
- a state of affairs Dr Mercuri denounces as
"an abomination".
-
-
- One
of the conditions states have to fulfil to receive
federal funding for the new voting machines,
meanwhile, is a consolidation of voter rolls
at state rather than county level. This provision
sends a chill down the spine of anyone who has
studied how Florida consolidated its own voter
rolls just before the 2000 election, purging
the names of tens of thousands of eligible voters,
most of them African Americans and most of them
Democrats, through misuse of an erroneous list
of convicted felons commissioned by Katherine
Harris, the secretary of state doubling as George
Bush's Florida campaign manager. Despite a volley
of lawsuits, the incorrect list was still in
operation in last November's mid-terms, raising
all sorts of questions about what other states
might now do with their own voter rolls. It
is not that the Act's consolidation provision
is in itself evidence of a conspiracy to throw
elections, but it does leave open that possibility.
-
-
- Meanwhile,
the administration has been pushing new voting
technology of its own to help overseas citizens
and military personnel, both natural Republican
Party constituencies, to vote more easily over
the internet. Internet voting is notoriously
insecure and open to abuse by just about anyone
with rudimentary hacking skills; just last January,
an experiment in internet voting in Toronto
was scuppered by a Slammer worm attack. Undeterred,
the administration has gone ahead with its so-called
SERVE project for overseas voting, via a private
consortium made up of major defence contractors
and a Saudi investment group. The contract for
overseeing internet voting in the 2004 presidential
election was recently awarded to Accenture,
formerly part of the Arthur Andersen group (whose
accountancy branch, a major campaign contributor
to President Bush, imploded as a result of the
Enron bankruptcy scandal).
-
-
- Not
everyone in the United States has fallen under
the spell of the big computer voting companies,
and there are signs of growing wariness. Oregon
decided even before HAVA to conduct all its
voting by mail. Wisconsin has decided it wants
nothing to do with touchscreen machines without
a verifiable paper trail, and New York is considering
a similar injunction, at least for its state
assembly races. In California, a Stanford computer
science professor called David Dill is screaming
from the rooftops on the need for a paper trail
in his state, so far without result. And a New
Jersey Congressman called Rush Holt has introduced
a bill in the House of Representatives, the
Voter Confidence and Increased Accessibility
Act, asking for much the same thing. Not everyone
is heeding the warnings, though. In Ohio, publication
of the letter from Diebold's chief executive
promising to deliver the state to President
Bush in 2004 has not deterred the secretary
of state - a Republican - from putting Diebold
on a list of preferred voting-machine vendors.
Similarly, in Maryland, officials have not taken
the recent state-sponsored study identifying
hundreds of flaws in the Diebold software as
any reason to change their plans to use Diebold
machines in March's presidential primary.
-
-
- The
question is whether the country will come to
its senses before elections start getting distorted
or tampered with on such a scale that the system
becomes unmanageable. The sheer volume of money
offered under HAVA is unlikely to be forthcoming
again in a hurry, so if things aren't done right
now it is doubtful they can be fixed again for
a long time. "This is frightening, really
frightening," says Dr Mercuri, and a growing
number of reasonable people are starting to
agree with her. One such is John Zogby, arguably
the most reliable pollster in the United States,
who has freely admitted he "blew"
last November's elections and does not exclude
the possibility that foul play was one of the
factors knocking his calculations off course.
"We're ploughing into a brave new world
here," he says, "where there are so
many variables aside from out-and-out corruption
that can change elections, especially in situations
where the races are close. We have machines
that break down, or are tampered with, or are
simply misunderstood. It's a cause for great
concern."
Roxanne
Jekot, who has put much of her professional and
personal life on hold to work on the issue full
time, puts it even more strongly. "Corporate
America is very close to running this country.
The only thing that is stopping them from taking
total control are the pesky voters. That's why
there's such a drive to control the vote. What
we're seeing is the corporatisation of the last
shred of democracy.
"I
feel that unless we stop it here and stop it now,"
she says, "my kids won't grow up to have
a right to vote at all."
- ©
2003 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd
-
2003
Topplebush.com
October 15, 2003
|