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1 (January 30, 2003)

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                                                                Order Code RS20898
                                                            Updated January 30, 2003



 CRS Report for Congress

               Received through the CRS Web



      Elections Reform: Overview and Issues


                            Kevin J. Coleman
                Analyst in American National Government
                    Government and Finance Division

                              Eric A. Fischer
              Senior Specialist in Science and Technology
                Resources, Science, and Industry Division

Summary


     The remarkable circumstances of the 2000 Presidential election are quite unlikely
 to be repeated, but Florida's role in determining the outcome may be remembered as a
 turning point with respect to the nation's election system. Previously obscure details of
 voting and vote counting became the focus of public attention, and various state and
 national commissions issued reports or recommendations on changing the voting
 process. Some states made plans or began to replace voting equipment and adopt other
 improvements before the 2002 election cycle. Both sessions of the 107'h Congress
 considered and debated federal election reform legislation, and the Help America Vote
 Act (P.L. 107-252) was enacted in October 2002. The Act creates a new federal agency
 with election administration responsibilities, sets requirements for voting and voter-
 registration systems and certain other aspects of election administration, and provides
 federal funding, but does not supplant state and local control over election
 administration. Issues for the 108th Congress may include funding, establishment of the
 new agency, and implementation by and impacts on the states. For additional
 information, see the CRS Electronic Briefing Book on Election Reform. This report will
 be updated periodically to reflect new developments.


 Voting Systems and Election Administration

    After election day 2000, the media focused attention on specific problems with
punchcard voting. After that, however, broader questions arose about error rates, costs,
counting standards, accessibility, and other issues, as election officials considered
upgrading voting systems. Elections in the United States are administered at the state and
local level, and the federal government has not historically set mandatory standards for
voting systems, nor has it provide funding to state and local jurisdictions for the
administration of elections. The Help America Vote Act of 2002 changes that. While
initial reactions to concerns raised by the November 2000 election tended to focus on

       Congressional Research Service **o The Library of Congress

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