Too early to declare automated poll success

Group urges Comelec to wait for manual audit of returns
By MARVYN N. BENANING
May 13, 2010, 6:04pm

Halalang Marangal has asked the Commission on Elections (Comelec) to go slow in proclaiming winners pending the audit of election returns (ERs).

Roberto Verzola, Halalang Marangal secretary-general, said discrepancies between machine and audit counts like what happened in Manila highlight the need for prudence.

“People want a successful election so badly, that it is easy to get carried away by flood of incoming election returns. Many want to believe that a clean and speedy election has finally happened, at last. But let not the public euphoria at the speed of counting erase the persistent concerns about the process," Verzola said.

The vice presidential race is yet to be settled while the stiff competition for the 12th spot in the senatorial race calls for thorough scrutiny, he added.  "Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of local races also await to be settled."

"It is too early for the Comelec and supporters of the automated election system (AES) to indulge in self-congratulation," said Verzola. "There are complaints of delayed ERs, malfunctioning, missing or otherwise questionable memory cards, and other indicators of potential or emerging problems."

"This is not to say we advocate a full return to the old manual system, but only a prudent scrutiny of the automated process in the light of its earlier miscounts, apart from the automated results. In 2004, many who wanted 'anyone but FPJ; embraced the results, relieved that the elections fulfilled their expectations, and chose to ignore the niggling questions that eventually exploded in our collective faces as the 'Hello Garci' scandal. Let us not repeat the same mistake; let the niggling questions be answered satisfactorily, before we finally accept the final results,” he said.

“As in the manual system, the precinct level count is always the fastest. Even when election inspectors, watchers and the public counted votes by hand, most of the election results had always been available past midnight or early morning. Even under the manual method, the biggest challenge has always been at the municipal level and higher, where wholesale cheating operations occurred," Verzola said.

The Halalang Marangal officer said the AES failed in its first truly public test a week before election day, when many candidates got zero – a "bawas" -- and some got more than the votes actually cast for them – a "dagdag."

"The results were worse than most manual counts. An embarrassed Comelec quickly called off the public test, and traced the problem to misaligned ovals on the ballot. Because of a last-minute change from single-spacing to double-spacing in the ballot layout for local candidates, their oval locations did not anymore match the coordinates stored in a configuration file in a memory card within the PCOS machine," he said.

"Reconfiguring the memory cards was somewhat easier than reprinting ballots, so that was what the Comelec and Smartmatic tried to do. Smartmatic only had 18,000 spare memory cards, so in addition to the spares, Smartmatic recalled the cards that could still be recalled; imported the rest from Hong Kong and Taiwan; edited each of the 1,631 ballot layout configuration files (unique for every town); programmed these configuration files into 76,340 memory cards (one for each machine); delivered the 76,340 newly reconfigured memory cards to the waiting machines all over  the archipelago; found the right machines for the right memory cards; replaced the misconfigured memory card; and conducted a second round of public testing and sealing of the PCOS machines. All within a span of five days – 120 hours. Aside from some 400 machines that malfunctioned, the rest of the 76,340 machines worked fine and gave the country its first successful automated elections. So they say," Verzola said.

"Can we now trust the machine results? These machines had grievously failed to count a few days earlier. This was followed by a mad rush of recalls, importations, file reconfigurations, card reprogramming, deliveries, reinstallations, and a second round of testing and sealing. In the rush, were security procedures and chain of custody guidelines still observed? Did anyone see an election inspector with an ultraviolet lamp to check for authentic ballots, for instance? (We have not found anyone who did.) What about more subtle potential problems that a ten-ballot test set was insufficient to detect – ovals that were misaligned by only one or two millimeters, for example, or oval coordinates that were purposely changed slightly to shave votes from targetted candidates. Were tests done at all for these potential problems?" he asked.

"Every candidate who lost – and won – in the machine-counted 2010 elections should demand thorough post-election testing and audit for accuracy of every counting machine and its results. Losing candidates should demand it, because they might have actually won," Verzola said.

"Winning candidates – especially those who lead by a huge margin – should demand it, because the gross machine errors a few days earlier and subsequent doubts about machine accuracy have devalued their victory. Apparent president-elect Noynoy Aquino should demand it, if only for the sake of his running-mate," he said.