Just watched "Man of the Year" on HBO, with Robin Williams as a Jon Stewart-like character elected to the Presidency through buggy electronic voting machines. If you haven't seen Hacking Democracy, you really should.
But most importantly, review this from Bruce Schneier and the linked contents for a review on the sorry state of the software driving the voting machines are elections officials have been buying. It's frightening.
In a dramatic development that has come as a surprise to pundits and the public alike, a youthful technician with Diebold, Inc. has emerged as the unlikely winner of the 2008 U.S. Presidential election. The president-elect, 19 year old Billy Pustule of Green, Ohio, reached via SMS at the garage apartment by his mother's house in which he currently resides, said he was "real psyched about being the president" and "had big plans for the inauguration party".
. . .
According to the official electronic tally, compiled and certified by Diebold voting engineers, President-elect Pustule won an impressive 59.6% of the popular vote nationwide, the strongest showing ever received by a write-in candidate. He was followed by 38% for Democratic candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton, and 28.6% for Republican candidate Bill Frist. The fact that the totals exceed 100% has been attributed by a Diebold spokesman to "a special kind of rounding".