• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

State of Elections

William & Mary Law School | Election Law Society

Hide Search

We Didn’t Start the Fire: Texas Loses Thousands of Voting Machines in Inferno

Election Law Society · September 8, 2010 ·

Elections are a delicate and complex process. In the months leading up to Election Day, election officials must anticipate and prepare for hundreds of potential issues. But in Texas, an issue nobody could have foreseen has left the best laid plans of the Harris County Clerk’s Office in disarray.

Over 10,000  voting machines were destroyed in a sudden warehouse fire on August 27th, leaving the county without a single voting machine to use in the upcoming elections.  Luckily, no one was injured, but with just two months to go before Election Day, the county is scrambling to find ways to salvage the situation.

In what may be the biggest understatement of this electoral cycle, County Clerk Beverly Kaufman speculates that there “likely will be a shortage of voting machines on Election Day”. A shortage of election machines in Harris County is no joke, as the county is home to over 4 million people and roughly 15 percent of Texas’s registered voters.  However, Kaufman is doing whatever it takes to ensure elections run as smoothly as possible despite this setback.  Kaufman announced an emergency plan to spend $13.6 million to buy 2,325 voting machines.  Additionally, Harris County officials are attempting to borrow spare voting machines from other counties. The county used around 4,300 machines in the previous gubernatorial election, so 2,325 plus some loaner machines may be enough to get the county through this upcoming election.

Despite the obvious difficulties facing Harris County, Kaufman promises that every single polling place will be open on Election Day, and that voters will not be inconvenienced by the loss of the machines.  Closing polling locations may not seem like a problem, but if some polling stations were closed, voters in those precincts would need to be informed about where to report on Election Day. This reeducation effort could be expensive and confusing, and since voters may have to travel to relatively inconvenient polling stations, turnout could suffer.

Interestingly, a possible solution could come in the form of early voting.  Earlier this week, this site published an article listing the benefits of allowing no-excuse absentee ballots to be sent before Election Day.  In Harris County, early voting is now more useful than ever.  The county is recommending that citizens send in absentee ballots before Election Day, to help alleviate any overcrowding at the polls.

Though no official ruling has been made about whether the fire was arson, that has not stopped some from speculating about its origin.  The Huffington Post published this article which all but accuses the local Houston Tea Party, known as the King Street Patriots, of starting the fire to assist in a “voter suppression campaign”. At this stage, there appears to be absolutely no evidence concerning the cause of the fire, but as more facts start to come out, this could turn very ugly, very quick.  Keep an eye on this story.

Anthony Balady is a student at William & Mary School of Law, and Editor-in-Chief of stateofelections.com

When he joined the naval intelligence division in 1939 he became the assistant to www.justbuyessay.com/ its chief, admiral john godfrey.

Texas

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Assisted Living TX says

    October 27, 2010 at 11:12 pm

    There are a lot of people who are worried about voter disenfranchisement. Sometimes Senior Citizens are the most concerned, after the fiasco in Miami-Dade 10 years ago. But I seriously doubt that either party would go to such extremes as to set fire to voting machines. But maybe that’s just me…

Primary Sidebar

Pages

  • About Us
  • Election Law Glossary
  • Staff History
  • Links
  • Archived Pages
    • Citizens United + The States
    • Virginia Redistricting Competition

Search

View Posts by State

Archives

Tags

2016 Election 2020 Election Absentee ballots absentee voting Ballot Access ballot initiative Campaign Finance Citizens United Colorado Disenfranchise disenfranchisement Early Voting Election 2016 Electronic Voting Felon Voting Rights First Amendment Gerrymandering in-depth article judicial elections mail-in voting National Voter Registration Act North Carolina photo ID primary election Redistricting Referendum Registration Secretary of State state of elections Supreme Court Texas Virginia Vote by mail Voter Fraud Voter ID Voter Identification voter registration Voter Turnout voting voting and COVID Voting Machines Voting Rights Voting Rights Act VRA William & Mary

Blogroll

  • Election Law Issues
  • William & Mary Law School
  • Williamsburg Redistricting – "The Flat Hat" article

Friends

  • W&M Election Law Program

Contact Information:

To contact us, send an email to
wmstateofelections@gmail.com

Current Editorial Staff

Brendan W. Clark ’24, Editor-in-Chief
Rachel Clyburn ’24, Editor-in-Chief

State of Elections

Copyright © 2025 · Monochrome Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.Ok