A bipartisan group of legislators Tuesday proposed switching to paper ballots, even mail-in ballots, to replace the state’s “archaic” voting machines before South Carolinians cast their votes in the 2020 presidential election. Four S.C. House and Senate legislators said Tuesday they will pre-file bills next month to address the state’s aging voting machines and how the state should pay for a new voting system. “A voting system that is not only fair but also gives voters confidence that their vote has been cast and their vote has been … counted,” said state Sen. Thomas McElveen, D-Sumter. Money for a new voting system should not be that hard to find in what is developing as a flush budget year.
The state will have $1 billion more to spend next year in its $9 billion general fund budget, the state Board of Economic Advisors forecasts. That added money includes the state’s one-time budget surplus of $177 million and the state’s $61.5 million share of October’s historic S.C. Lottery winnings.
State and county election officials have urged lawmakers to spend money to replace 13,000 old touchscreen voting machines, bought in 2004. Those machines posed problems last week in Richland and York counties, where voters complained the machines were changing their candidate selections when they pressed the screens.
Full Article: Should South Carolina ditch outdated voting machines, switch to paper?.