“电话投票?”——斯瓦威尔的投票现代化计划可能危及全国选举的公正性。
'Vote By Phone?" - Swalwell's Plan To Modernize Voting Could Put Election Integrity at Risk Nationwide

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/vote-phone-swalwells-plan-modernize-voting-could-put-election-integrity-risk-nationwide

加州国会议员埃里克·斯瓦威尔最近宣布竞选州长,并提出允许电话投票的方案,引发了对选举安全的担忧。斯瓦威尔将这一想法描述为使投票过程现代化,并指出网上银行和医疗预约等便利之处。他还提议对在现场投票点排队时间过长的县处以罚款。 然而,批评者认为这优先考虑了便利性而非完整性,并引用了电子投票系统过去的失败案例。2020年爱荷华州党团会议的混乱以及在Voatz等应用程序中发现的安全漏洞表明,依赖未经测试的技术存在风险,研究人员强调了纸质选票和现场验证的安全性。 鉴于加州对国家政策的影响,斯瓦威尔的提议可能会为其他州树立先例,可能削弱全国范围内的选举安全。这场辩论凸显了扩大投票权与维护民主进程完整性之间的核心矛盾。

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原文

Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) launched his bid for governor of California this week, and he wasted no time floating a plan that could reshape elections far beyond the state’s borders. He told CNN’s Elex Michaelson on Saturday that he wants Californians to vote by phone, a proposal that fits neatly with the left’s push to loosen every guardrail that keeps our elections secure.

“I want to modernize the state,” Swalwell told him. “And, you know, [Newsom] wrote a book called Citizenville, which I read when I was up and coming. He laid out a lot of, you know, great ideas then, and he implemented some of them. And he, you know, was a modernizing force. He's leaving. And so there is going to be a void. I want us to be able to vote by phone.”

“Vote by phone?” Michaelson asked, clearly surprised by the idea.

“Vote by phone, yeah,” Swalwell confirmed. “If we can do our taxes, do our, you know, our -- make our health care appointments, you know, make, essentially, your — do your banking online. You should be able to vote by phone. Make it safe, make it secure. But it's actually already happening all over the United States.”

Swalwell continued, “I want us to be a blue state that doesn't do just a little bit better than like Georgia or Alabama when it comes to like voting access, I want us to max out democracy. Also, as it relates to democracy, if you wait in line for 30 minutes or more, if you do want to vote in person, I think you should fine every county for every minute that a person has to wait longer.”

He added, “We have to be better, not just a little bit better than the other states.”

Swalwell painted his proposal as part of a broader modernization effort, citing the DMV as another area where modernization can occur.

“I don't think Californians should have to go in person to the DMV anymore. I think we can do that virtually. I think you can have the DMV employees do it virtually, but that's a lot of real estate.”

No one likes waiting in line at the DMV. Still, Swalwell’s vision for voting turns one of the most critical pillars of our republic into an experiment in convenience at the expense of integrity. It’s been tried before, and the vulnerabilities are well known.

The 2020 Iowa Democratic caucus exposed the risks of relying on electronic voting apps.

Technical glitches and design flaws caused delays and widespread confusion, leaving thousands of votes uncounted or misreported on caucus night, reinforcing the argument that U.S. elections are far safer and more reliable when conducted with paper ballots and in-person verification, rather than depending on untested or insecure technology.

Similarly, MIT researchers identified serious security and privacy vulnerabilities in the mobile voting app Voatz, which was used in several U.S. elections, including the 2018 West Virginia midterms. Their analysis showed that despite claims of blockchain-based security, hackers could alter or expose individual votes.

The researchers emphasized that internet voting remains insecure, stressing the importance of paper ballots and open, auditable election systems to maintain public trust.

What happens in California rarely stays in California.

If California - a state that often serves as a launchpad for progressive policies to the national level - pulls this off, other states will soon follow.

Which means Swalwell’s plan for voting by phone could pose an existential threat to election integrity nationwide.

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