BuzzFlash
News Analysis Update: November 18, 2004
Study released Thursday indicates the probability is that electronic
voting machines may have awarded 130,000 - 260,000 or more in excess
votes to Bush in Florida
BuzzFlash was
a telephone media participant in a 10 AM (Pacific Time), November 18th,
news conference conducted by the Survey Research Center of the University
of California at Berkeley.[LINK] This is our report.
A research team
at UC Berkeley reported Thursday morning that irregularities associated
with electronic voting machines may have awarded 130,000 - 260,000 or
more in excess votes to President George W. Bush in Florida in the 2004
presidential election. The study showed an unexplained discrepancy between
votes for President Bush in counties where electronic voting machines
were used versus counties using traditional voting methods.
Discrepancies
this large or larger rarely arise by chance -- the probability is less
than 0.1 percent. The research team, led by Sociology Professor Michael
Hout, formally disclosed the results of the study at a press conference
and called for an immediate investigation by Florida officials
“The three
counties where the voting anomalies were most prevalent were also the
most heavily Democratic counties, not the [conservative] Dixiecrat counties
you’ve all heard about before, but the more heavily Democratic
counties that used e-vote technology, including Broward, Palm Beach,
and Miami-Dade counties in order of magnitude,” said Professor
Hout.
The statistical
patterns in counties that did not have e-touch voting machines predicted
a 28,000 vote decrease in President Bush’s share of the 2004 vote
in Broward County, but the machines actually tallied an increase of
51,000 votes for a net gain of 81,000 votes for the President.
With the research
team’s statistical model, it was expected that President Bush
should have lost 8,900 votes in Palm Beach County but instead he gained
41,000, a difference of 49,900 votes.
And President
Bush should have gained only 18,000 votes in Miami-Dade County but in
fact gained 37,000, for a difference of 19,300 votes.
“The disparity
in favor of the incumbent President Bush cannot be explained away by
other factors. The study shows that counties that used electronic voting
resulted in disproportionate increases of votes for the President,”
said Professor Hout.
Furthermore,
statistical adjustments for the size of the counties, the number of
votes cast, income, ethnicity and other factors, do not explain or account
for the discrepancy why the President received so many votes in heavily
democratic counties that used electronic voting.
Hout made this
appeal: “For the sake of all future elections involving electronic
voting, someone needs to explain the statistical anomalies that we found
in Florida. We’re calling on officials in Florida to take up this
task and to take action now.”
http://www.buzzflash.com/buzzscripts/buzz.dll/sub2 |