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House Master Joseph L. Badaracco announced Friday that Currier House
will be scrapping the results of three earlier rounds of voting for
House Committee (HoCo) chairs and holding an entirely new election in
February, after students raised concerns about the security of the
online voting system.
The revelation that students could vote multiple times on surveymonkey.com, the website used for the election this year, added a new twist to an increasingly bizarre election.
In an e-mail to the House, Badaracco expressed his surprise
about last week’s election, which witnessed a tie in both initial and
run-off voting.
“Murphy’s law – if something can go wrong it will – was at work,” he wrote.
When the initial vote for HoCo co-chairs closed last Tuesday,
Techrosette Leng ’07 held the lead with 99 votes, while candidates
Christopher S. Cullen ’07 and Geoffrey D. Kearney ’07 tied with 67
votes each. A run-off election between Cullen and Kearney resulted on
Thursday in an unlikely second tie, with both candidates garnering 90
votes.
In a meeting late Thursday night, Badaracco and the outgoing
HoCo members decided to hold an unprecedented second run-off election.
But after the committee realized that users could vote multiple times
from the same link using different computers, Badaracco canceled the
election.
An entirely new election, administered via paper ballots,
will take place at the beginning of next semester, according to
Badaracco’s e-mail. All three candidates will again present speeches
and answer questions from House members.
This decision capped a weekend of long meetings, heated discussions, and what Leng called a “whirlwind” of e-mails.
“It’s been really intense, very emotional,” Leng said on Saturday. “On the whole, it was an exhausting process.”
The committee decided against immediately holding another runoff before intersession.
“It would generate voter fatigue and make a mockery of the
entire system if done this semester,” said Leng, who participated in
the discussions about the elections. “If done second semester, it will
help remedy voter fatigue and open it up to the rest of the House.”
The paper balloting should also quell students’ concerns about
the security and fairness of the electronic system, according to
outgoing HoCo Vice-Chair Samita A. Mannapperuma ’06.
“Because this is so important, we want to have full confidence in the results,” said Mannapperuma, who is also a Crimson editor.
The curious circumstances in Currier have elicited calls for a
uniform, secure online system for House elections. Currently, each
House uses its own voting method—some use paper ballots, while others
use electronic systems.
“We need a campus-wide system for HoCo elections,” said
Mannapperuma. “Something analogous to the [Undergraduate Council]
voting system.”
Kearney said he was not surprised to hear that the online voting method was less than secure.
“There were questions from the beginning about how secure an online poll could be,” he said. “Our fears were confirmed.”
Aside from the voting oddities, House members said the election
was also notable for the high voter turnout. Almost two-thirds of the
House participated in each vote.
Outgoing HoCo members attributed the high level of
participation to the popularity of the candidates and general
enthusiasm for the social events sponsored by the HoCo.
“The three candidates are widely known in the House and are
very popular,” said Mannapperuma. “They’re promoting a lot of different
social initiatives.”
Leng pointed to the HoCo’s success in promoting House unity
and House-wide events. Each week, for example, close to a hundred
Currier residents turn out to watch the latest edition of the hit TV
show “24.”
“The main reason there was so much participation this year is
that the Currier HoCo is very present in the House and is something
people adore and love,” Leng said.
All three candidates also tried to make personal appeals to voters.
“There have been high levels of outreach to people in Currier,”
Kearney said. “I’ve been telling them, ‘If you want a hand in choosing
leaders, then come out to surveymonkey.’”
While candidates said they were stressed and disappointed by
the ups and downs of the week’s voting, they had high hopes for the
future.
“It’s not ideal,” said Kearney. “But it’s the best thing we
can do if we want to elect two legitimately elected co-chairs to the
House Committee.”
—Staff writer Dan R. Rasmussen can be reached at drasmuss@fas.harvard.edu.
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