- Nov 25, 2001
- 13,136
- 1
- 0
Hacking the electoral college 101 
WaPo: Group Pushes Kerry-Nader Vote Swap
By Brian Faler
Saturday, September 25, 2004; Page A05
Vote swapping is back.
A group of liberal activists has created a Web site that helps John F. Kerry's and Ralph Nader's supporters trade votes in this year's election -- in the hopes of defeating President Bush.
The site, VotePair (www.votepair.org), introduces Nader supporters who live in swing states to Kerry backers from non-battleground states. The participants agree to vote for each other's candidates, in an elaborate attempt to maximize the Democratic nominee's chances of winning the November election without, in the process, taking votes away from Nader.
"Bush was able to win in the electoral college because of the way progressive votes were distributed across the country," the site says. "If 600 voters who cast ballots for Nader in Florida had instead voted for Gore and 600 voters who cast ballots for Gore in Texas had instead voted for Nader, George W. Bush would have lost the entire election."
The site is reminiscent of a number of vote-trading Web sites that first emerged during the 2000 contest. Elections officials in several states declared the sites illegal, saying they violated laws prohibiting bartering for ballots. Some of the sites were shut down; others lasted through the election. In all, about 36,000 Nader and Gore supporters traded votes, according to Jamin Raskin, an American University law professor who is advising VotePair. Because of the secret ballot, his estimate cannot be confirmed.
Raskin predicted that the group, which said it has signed up 400 voters since its launch earlier this week, would face similar legal challenges this year.
"We're hopeful that government officials will not try to interfere with political speech and association during a presidential election," he said. "But the behavior of some of these secretaries of state leaves us a bit apprehensive."