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IN Sec'y Of State Says Hoosier Lawmakers Wouldn't Provide Election Security Money She Asked For

Brandon Smith/IPB News

Secretary of State Connie Lawson says Indiana legislators wouldn’t provide funding for election security measures at the level she wanted.

Still, Lawson says Hoosiers should have confidence their votes are secure.

About two-thirds of Indiana counties use electronic voting machines that experts say should include paper audit trails. The General Assembly this year appropriated $10 million in the new state budget for election security, which will pay to add those paper trails to just 10 percent of the machines that need them by next year.

Lawson says she initially asked budget writers for more money.

“But they told us to get real," Lawson says. "So, we got real and we tried to hone it down to where it was possible to get the dollars.”

READ MORE: State Approves First Voter-Verified Paper Trail For Electronic Voting Machines

Lawson says adding paper trails to 10 percent of the machines is an important marker.

“We know that that would be enough to take a good statistical sampling of the way the ballots were cast and that we could do a post-election audit and determine that there were no anomalies,” Lawson says.

Lawson stresses that none of the state's electronic voting machines are ever connected to the internet.

It will be a decade before all Indiana voting machines that need paper trails get them, unless counties move forward on their own.

Contact Brandon at bsmith@ipbs.org or follow him on Twitter at @brandonjsmith5.

If you appreciate this kind of journalism on your local NPR station, please support it by donating at:  https://wvpe.thankyou4caring.org/ 

Brandon Smith is excited to be working for public radio in Indiana. He has previously worked in public radio as a reporter and anchor in mid-Missouri for KBIA Radio out of Columbia. Prior to that, he worked for WSPY Radio in Plano, Illinois as a show host, reporter, producer and anchor. His first job in radio was in another state capitol, in Jefferson City, Missouri, as a reporter for three radio stations around Missouri. Brandon graduated from the University of Missouri-Columbia with a Bachelor of Journalism in 2010, with minors in political science and history. He was born and raised in Chicago.