2-18-05
A
Corrupted Election
Despite
what you may have heard, the exit polls were right
by Steve Freeman
and Josh Mitteldorf, In These Times
February 15th, 2005
Recall the Election Day exit polls that suggested John Kerry
had won a convincing victory? The media readily dismissed
those polls and little has been heard about them since.
Many Americans,
however, were suspicious. Although President Bush prevailed
by 3 million votes in the official, tallied vote count, exit
polls had projected a margin of victory of 5 million votes
for Kerry. This unexplained 8 million vote discrepancy between
the election night exit polls and the official count should
raise a Chinese May Day of red flags.
The U.S. voting
system is more vulnerable to manipulation than most Americans
realize. Technologies such as electronic voting machines provide
no confirmation that votes are counted as cast, and highly
partisan election officials have the power to suppress votes
and otherwise distort the count.
Exit polls are
highly accurate. They remove most of the sources of potential
polling error by identifying actual voters and asking them
immediately afterward who they had voted for.
The reliability
of exit polls is so generally accepted that the Bush administration
helped pay for them during recent elections in Georgia, Belarus
and Ukraine. Testifying before the House Committee on International
Relations Dec. 7, John Tefft, deputy assistant secretary of
state for European and Eurasian affairs, explained that the
Bush administration funded exit polls because they were one
of the "ways that would help to expose large-scale fraud."
Tefft pointed to the discrepancy between exit polls and the
official vote count to argue that the Nov. 22 Ukraine election
was stolen.
Grasping at explanations
Last November in
the United States, as in Ukraine, the discrepancy between
the presidential exit polls and the tallied count was far
beyond the margin for error. At the time, Edison Media Research
and Mitofsky International, the two companies hired to do
the polling for the National Election Pool (a consortium of
the nation's five major broadcasters and the Associated Press),
didn't provide an explanation for how this happened. They
promised, however, that a full explanation would be forthcoming.
On Jan. 19, on
the eve of the inauguration, Edison and Mitofsky released
their report, "Evaluation of Edison/Mitofsky Election
System 2004," which generated headlines such as MSNBC's
"Exit Polls Prove That Bush Won." But, the report
does nothing of the sort. It restates a thesis that the pollsters
previously intimated—that the discrepancy was "most
likely due to Kerry voters participating in the exit polls
at a higher rate than Bush voters." But the body of the
report offers no data to substantiate this position. In fact,
data presented in the report serve to rebut the thesis, and
bolster suspicions that the official vote count was way, way
off.
The report states
that the difference between exit polls and official tallies
was far too great to be explained by chance ("sampling
error"), and that a systematic bias is implicated.
With that statement
the pollsters confirm the discrepancy we initially documented.
The exit polls were based on more than 70,000 confidential
questionnaires completed by randomly selected voters as they
exited the polling place. The overall margin of error should
have been under 1 percent. But the official result deviated
from the poll projections by more than 5 percent—a statistical
impossibility.
The pollsters report
that the precincts were appropriately chosen for sampling,
in that the aggregated official results from the sampled precincts
accurately reflected the official statewide ballot counts.
In saying this,
Mitofsky and Edison vindicate a key piece of their methodology—the
representativeness of their samples. If the fault indeed lies
with the exit polls, the range of possibilities for error
is therefore narrowed.
Finally, they report
that the source of error is, in fact, within-precinct error
(WPE), the difference between official precinct tallies and
the exit poll samples from those same precincts. On average,
across the country, the President did 6.5 percent better in
the official vote count, relative to Kerry, than the exit
polls projected.
This admission
further narrows the range of possibilities. If the polling
data are accurate, the only remaining possibilities are "non-response
bias" (i.e., Bush voters disproportionately did not participate
in the exit polls) and/or errors in the official tally.
However, having
gotten to this point in their argument, Mitofsky and Edison
summarily dismiss the possibility that the official count
was wrong. They reject the election fraud hypothesis because,
they say, "precincts with touch screen and optical voting
have essentially the same error rates as those using punch-card
systems."
Indeed, they do.
But this fact merely suggests that all three of these systems
may have been corrupted. Indeed, there is little question
about problems associated with both punch card systems (recall
the Florida debacle in 2000) and mechanical voting machines,
which are generally unreliable, vulnerable to tinkering and
leave no paper trail. That's why both systems have been slated
for termination under the Helping America Vote Act of 2002.
Notably, Mitofsky
and Edison unsucessfully try to explain away the fact that,
according to their data, only in precincts that used old-fashioned,
hand-counted paper ballots did the official count and the
exit polls fall within the normal sampling margin of error.
Further, data that
are underplayed in the report provide support for the hypothesis
that the election was stolen.
First, the report
acknowledges that the discrepancy between the exit polls and
the official count was considerably greater in the critical
swing states. And while that fact is consistent with allegations
of fraud (if you are going to steal an election you go after
votes most vigorously where they are most needed), Mitofsky
and Edison suggest, without providing any data or theory to
back up their claim, that this discrepancy is somehow related
to media coverage.
Second, in light
of the charges that the 2000 election was not legitimate,
the Bush/Cheney campaign would have wanted to prevail in the
popular vote. If fraud was afoot, it would make sense that
the president's men would steal votes in their strongholds,
where the likelihood of detection is small. Lo and behold,
the report provides data that strongly bolster this theory.
In those precincts that went at least 80 percent for Bush,
the average within-precinct-error (WPE) was a whopping 10.0—the
numerical difference between the exit poll predictions and
the official count. That means that in Bush strongholds, Kerry,
on average, received only about two-thirds of the votes that
exit polls predicted. In contrast, in Kerry strongholds, exit
polls matched the official count almost exactly (an average
WPE of 0.3).
Other report data
undermine the argument that Kerry voters were more likely
to complete the exit poll interview than Bush voters. If this
were the case, then one would expect that in precincts where
Kerry voters predominated, the cooperation rate would be higher
than in pro-Bush precincts. But in fact, the data suggest
that Bush voters were slightly more likely to complete the
survey: 56 percent of voters completed the survey in the Bush
strongholds, while 53 percent cooperated in Kerry strongholds.
Corollary evidence
The exit polls
themselves are a strong indicator of a corrupted election.
Moreover, the exit poll discrepancy must be interpreted in
the context of more than 100,000 officially logged reports
of irregularities during Election Day 2004. For many Americans,
if not most, mass-scale fraud in a U.S. presidential election
is an unthinkable possibility. But taken together, the allegations,
the subsequently documented irregularities, systematic vulnerabilities,
and implausible numbers suggest a coherent story of fraud
and deceit.
What's more, the
exit poll disparity doesn't tell the whole story. It doesn't
count those voters who were disenfranchised before they even
got to the polls. The voting machine shortages in Democratic
districts, the fraudulent felony purges of voter rolls, the
barriers to registration, and the unmailed, lost, or cavalierly
rejected absentee ballots all represent distortions to the
vote count above and beyond what is measured by the exit poll
disparity. The exit polls, by design, sample only those voters
who have already overcome these hurdles.
The thesis of the
Mitofsky/Edison exit poll report and the headlines that it
generated are curiously detached from the numbers in the report
itself. Statisticians who have studied the exit polls find
substantial evidence to support the thesis that the vote counts—not
the exit polls—were inaccurate.
Apparently, the
pollsters at Mitofsky and Edison have found it more expedient
to provide an explanation unsupported by theory, data or precedent
than to impugn the machinery of American democracy. Unfortunately,
their patrons in the media find it correspondingly preferable
to latch onto a non-confrontational thesis, however implausible,
than to even suggest the possibility of foul play.
A comprehensive
analysis of the Edison/Mitofsky report has been posted here.
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Home » News » Franklin County Pinpoints Cause
of ...
Franklin County
Pinpoints Cause of Inflated Bush Numbers
Akron Beacon Journal
(AP)
February 12th, 2005
COLUMBUS, Ohio The Illinois company that manufactured election
machines for Franklin County in Ohio has identified the error
that made a laptop computer give thousands of extra votes
to President Bush.
The mistake was caught several days after the election. It
had Bush receiving four-thousand-258 votes in a precinct in
the Columbus suburb of Gahanna where only 638 voters cast
ballots. The corrected official count showed 365 votes for
Bush.
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