Most New Hampshire voters cast their votes on vulnerable
Diebold optical-scan systems, leading election-reform activists to immediately begin examining the results from New Hampshire, claiming later to find evidence suggesting fraud. Republican presidential nominee candidate Albert Howard joined forces with
Ron Paul supporters bankrolling a full recount of the Republican primary. The Republican recount began on Wednesday January 16. The story initially was reported only online, but was later acknowledged by mainstream news outlets. Most observers have concluded that demographic trends influence both a community's means of counting ballots, and which candidates the community is likely to support. The recount began on January 16, 2008, after New Hampshire Secretary of State
Bill Gardner received $27,000 from Kucinich. The first ballots to be counted came from
Manchester. The campaigns and fair elections groups had the right to see and approve every ballot. In the GOP recount the votes for all candidates were exactly the same except for Mitt Romney who received 1 extra vote. With $55,600, Albert Howard is the first person in U.S. history to receive a statewide New Hampshire Primary Recount. The Deputy Secretary of State, David Scanlan, estimated that the Republican recount cost $57,600 and the Democratic recount, with more votes cast, cost $67,600. According to Howard's campaign Web site, some of his primary objectives include banning electronic voting. Quin Monson, an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at
BYU, commented: "There are people that do not trust the technology. [The] request for the recount is likely a response to that crowd." ==See also==