Ron Paul Got More Votes than All the Democrats In Nevada, and placed second among Republicans: �Paper trail� voting system used in Nevada - Electronic ballot machines equipped with printers

Ron Paul Got More Votes than All the Democrats In Nevada, and placed second among Republicans: �Paper trail� voting system used in Nevada - Electronic ballot machines equipped with printers
   
  WHAT A DIFFERENCE A PAPER TRAIL MAKES!
   
  Only Mitt Romney beat Ron Paul in this heavily Mormon state
  
Hillary and Obama ran hard in the state.
DEMS VOTES
Hillary Clinton 5,355
Barack Obama 4,773
John Edwards 396

REPUBS VOTES
Mitt Romney 22,649
Ron Paul 6,087
John McCain 5,651
Mike Huckabee 3,6i6
Fred Thompson 3,521
Rudy Giuliani 1,910
Duncan Hunter 890
Tom Tancredo 0
       
  http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5937115/
   
    �Paper trail� voting system used in Nevada Electronic ballot machines equipped with printers Isaac Brekkken / AP
  Election worker Stella Cuevas monitors an EDGE electronic voting machine during primary election voting at R. Guild Gray Elementary School in Las Vegas on Tuesday. The machines let voters view, but not keep, paper printouts of their ballots.
                INTERACTIVE
              [input]

      Learn how voting systems work, from paper ballots to e-voting.

  By Rachel Konrad

      Technology Writer
   updated 9:23 p.m. ET, Tues., Sept. 7, 2004

  CARSON CITY, Nev. - In what could become a model for other states, Nevada voters on Tuesday became the first in the nation to cast ballots in a statewide election on computers that printed paper records of electronic ballots.
  A delegation of federal election officials monitored the equipment�s debut in the state capital Tuesday, touring precincts and talking to poll workers as residents voted for congressional candidates, state legislators, school officials and judges.
  Nevada�s $9.3 million voting system includes more than 2,600 computers and printers deployed in every county. California, Washington and Illinois recently passed laws requiring a paper trail for electronic ballots, and at least 20 others are considering similar legislation.