An electronic voting machine test in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, on Friday
revealed a programming error that, had it not been caught and corrected
before the start of early voting next week, would not have counted hundreds
-- or possibly thousands -- of votes for president and U.S. Senate in this
Democratic stronghold.
The software error concerned straight party voting, where voters fill in one
oval on their paper ballot that indicates they want to vote for all the
candidates from a political party. The test revealed that the county's
vote-tabulating computer, which scans the ballots and compiles the vote
total, was not counting "straight party" votes for president and U.S.
Senate.
"It was a simple error," said Rick Padilla, a senior system supervisor for
the Santa Fe County Clerk office, which runs county elections. "When they
did the programming, they didn't link the oval to the (presidential and
senatorial votes on the) straight party ticket."
"It is one of the things that always has to be checked really carefully in a
general election," said Terry Rainey of Automated Election Services, the