County Commission | The Magazine April 2018 | Page 32

FROM THE COVER Election Administration: A Shifting Three-Way Balance Is there anything more American than voting in an election? M aybe so, if you look at the distinctly American way U.S. elections are operated. “Elections in the United States are administered in a highly decentralized process through which each state shapes its own election laws, which in turn shape the roles counties play,” stated the National Association of Counties in “Counties Matter: Elections.” In other words, it is a three-way balancing act of county, state and federal government. Some might say it doesn’t make sense for a government function as important, as fundamental, as the election process to be so thoroughly delegated to the states and then further delegated to counties. Differences are inevitable. Conceptually, this approach made perfect sense to the nation’s Founding Fathers, who were deeply suspicious of centralized authority. It stirs the imagination to consider what these men would think if they were to look in on the 2018 election cycle. The trend over the last 60 or so years has been toward more centralized decision- making and funding, a trend that appears likely to 32 | COUNTY COMMISSION continue with the heightened concerns about cyber security and recent actions in Congress. The voting rights reforms of the 1960s made the federal framework governing election processes more robust, but counties retained significant latitude. The next big shift in the three- way balance can be traced to the night of Tuesday, November 7, 2000. Americans had voted that day but went to bed that night without knowing who had won the presidency. The picture was no clearer the next morning. All told, Americans and many around the world held their breath for 36 days, waiting for recounts and legal wrangling to determine whether Vice President Al Gore or Texas Gov. George W. Bush would move into the White House. The outcome hinged on Florida, and the uncertainty there was in many ways due to election administration decisions made at the county level: voting technology and ballot design. Suddenly everyone was talking about punch-card voting, butterfly ballots and hanging chads. To their credit, the leaders in Palm Beach County have made sure that elections run much more