The Case For Fraud
November 3 2004
Counterbias.com
by Joseph Cannon
Ignore the rightist snickers. Ignore those who would straightjacket permissible thought. We have a right to ask difficult questions.
And the question of the moment concerns exit polls and electronic voting.
Some have criticized my pessimistic attitude toward this election, but I always heeded the warnings sounded by Bev Harris and others regarding computerized voting. If Kerry did not win handily, he could not win at all. A truly lopsided vote would have been impossible to hide, because oversized gaps between polls and election night counts would prove too suspicious.
Although the vote was tight, such gaps nevertheless exists. And although they are not massive, the pattern gives us every right to voice our suspicions.
Remember when networks used to trumpet the accuracy of exit polling? Last night, I saw on-air talking heads (especially on CNN) loudly deride these same exit polls as untrustworthy.
Perhaps the methodology has become sloppy. Perhaps respondents have learned to enjoy fibbing to pollsters. Or perhaps something in our current vote-tabulation system is fishier than an all-you-can-eat sushi bar.
Before proceeding, recall the commonly-heard axiom that Democrats tend to vote late, while Republicans tend to vote early. Many challenge that belief. Still, keep the notion in mind.
Exit polls published yesterday afternoon (by Slate and a number of blogs) gave this portrait of certain key results:
OHIO: Kerry 50, Bush 49. FLORIDA: Kerry 50, Bush 49. NEW MEXICO: Kerry 51, Bush 48.
At times, the poll data was even more favorable to Kerry in these three key states. See, for example, this screen capture of CNN data in Ohio. No exit poll showed a Bush lead in any of these states.
Here are grounds for suspicion. Electronic voting machines figured heavily in the final tabulation of the results in Ohio, Florida, and New Mexico. Moreover, in all three, paper audit trails do not exist.
These states therefore offered the best, safest opportunity for manipulation of the final count.
Question 1: Even if we grant the potential inaccuracy of exit polls, how likely is it that in all three cases the inaccuracy would show a "non-existent" Democratic advantage? Why doesn't the discrepancy ever work in the other direction?
Question 2: Why did problems afflict exit polling in three swing states that have widespread computerized voting with no paper trails?
In other states, the exit polling matched the final results rather well. In Nevada, Illinois, and New Hampshire, computer votes do have paper trails and in those instances, the exit polls tracked the final totals.
To recap: In three states with no paper trails, we have exit poll/final tally disagreement. In three states with paper trails, we have exit poll/final tally congruence.
Coincidence?
Let's return to the notion that Republicans vote earlier than Democrats. Many dispute that bit of folk wisdom. Even so, is it likely that the people waiting four, five or more hours in long lines, well into the cold of the night, underwent this endurance test to demand more of the same? Shouldn't the polls have showed Kerry's lead expanding as the night went on, instead of evaporating?
Intriguingly, CNN's exit poll results underwent a mysterious revision not explained by an increased number of respondents.
Black Box Voting plans to file the world's largest FOIA request to uncover the internals of the compu-vote. Don't presume that such an inquest will come up goose eggs:
Such a request filed in King County, Washington on Sept. 15, following the primary election six weeks ago, uncovered an internal audit log containing a three-hour deletion on election night; "trouble slips" revealing suspicious modem activity; and profound problems with security, including accidental disclosure of critically sensitive remote access information to poll workers, office personnel, and even, in a shocking blunder, to Black Box Voting activists.
Today's Boston Globe expands on some of the points I've made here:
Although some of John F. Kerry's leads in the state exit polls narrowed during the course of the day yesterday, there was a significant discrepancy between the actual vote total and the polling numbers, particularly in two states believed to be keys to the outcome.
While the exit data had Kerry winning Florida and Ohio by a narrow margin, the actual tabulated vote late last night had Bush carrying Florida by about five points and winning Ohio by two. In addition, a projected Kerry win of about five points in Wisconsin turned into a very tight contest, and what was projected as a close race in North Carolina turned into a double-digit win for Bush.
Again: Note the pattern. Why do the exit polls always go wrong in the same way? Pundits who assail these polls never address this question.
Logic tells us that about half the exit polls would show "false positives" for the Republican side. But in the past two presidential elections, they have almost always (should I strike out the word "almost"?) delivered "false positives" for Democrats only.
The simplest explanation: The Democratic "false positives" are not, in fact, false. The computerized tally is false.
Remember: If malign parties have tampered with the electronic result, then our first, best and perhaps only indication of fraud will be a conflict between the exit poll data and the "official" results.
As for what to do about it: May I at least suggest a visit to www.blackboxvoting.org?