The use of computers to record and tabulate votes has been increasingly controversial since the passage of the Help America Vote Act in 2002. This paper traces that controversy, exploring whether the elite debate about technology has affected popular attitudes. The empirical focus here is public opinion about voting technologies from 2012 to 2019. We find a consistent status-quo bias in attitudes about computer equipment — users of direct-recording electronic devices (DREs) tend to favor DREs and users of opscans tend to favor opscans. On top of this bias, DREs have tended to be regarded as superior to both opscans and hand-counted paper over the time covered in the paper, although this advantage has recently declined. The decline in the relative preference for DREs had been greatest among survey respondents who pay the greatest attention to news and public affairs.
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11 June 2020
Research Article|
June 11 2020
Attitudes toward Voting Technology, 2012–2019 Available to Purchase
Charles Stewart III;
Charles Stewart III
Department of Political Science, The Massachusetts Institute of Technology
USA
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James Dunham
James Dunham
Center for Security and Emerging Technology, Walsh School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University
USA
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Online ISSN: 2689-4823
Print ISSN: 2689-4815
© 2020 C. Stewart III and J. Dunham
2020
C. Stewart III and J. Dunham
Licensed re-use rights only
Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy (2020) 1 (2): 159–187.
Citation
Stewart III C, Dunham J (2020), "Attitudes toward Voting Technology, 2012–2019". Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy, Vol. 1 No. 2 pp. 159–187, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/113.00000011
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