Our voting systems are a mess, but there is zero evidence of any kind of fraud. 
I fear this is going to become the Left's equivalent of birtherism...

E


http://fivethirtyeight.com/features/demographics-not-hacking-explain-the-election-results/

Demographics, Not Hacking, Explain The Election Results
Carl Bialik
Nov 23, 2016 at 2:22 PM

According to a report Tuesday in New York Magazine, a group of computer 
scientists and election lawyers have approached the Hillary Clinton campaign 
with evidence they believe suggests the election might have been hacked to make 
it appear that Donald Trump won the Electoral College when Clinton really did. 
The hacking claim appears to be based on concerns about tampering with 
electronic voting machines. We’ve looked into the claim — or at least, our best 
guess of what’s being claimed based on what has been reported — and 
statistically, it doesn’t check out.

There’s no clear evidence that the voting method used in a county — by machine 
or by paper — had an effect on the vote. Anyone making allegations of a 
possible massive electoral hack should provide proof, and we can’t find any. 
But it’s not even clear the group of computer scientists and election lawyers 
are making these claims. (More on this in a moment.)

More Politics

The New York article reports that a group that includes voting-rights attorney 
John Bonifaz and computer scientist J. Alex Halderman presented findings last 
week about Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania to top Clinton campaign 
officials to try to persuade them to call for a recount. Exactly what those 
findings were isn’t clear. The New York article includes just one example, a 
finding that Clinton did worse in counties in Wisconsin that used electronic 
voting machines instead of paper ballots.1 It’s not clear what data the group 
was using to call for a recount in Michigan and Pennsylvania, or if it was 
looking at data at all: It could have chosen those states because they were the 
ones besides Wisconsin that Trump won with the smallest margins. Bonifaz, 
Halderman and the Clinton campaign officials mentioned in the article didn’t 
respond to requests for comment or more detail about the study.

But in a Medium post on Wednesday, Halderman said the New York article 
“includes some incorrect numbers” and misrepresented his argument for recounts. 
He laid out an argument based not on any specific suspicious vote counts but on 
evidence that voting machines could be hacked, and that using paper ballots as 
a reference point could help determine if there were hacks. “Examining the 
physical evidence in these states — even if it finds nothing amiss — will help 
allay doubt and give voters justified confidence that the results are 
accurate,” Halderman wrote.

Without a recount, all we can do for now is look for any meaningful difference 
in the three states named in the New York article between votes in counties 
that used paper ballots and votes in ones that used machines. That quickly 
crossed Michigan off the list: The entire state uses paper ballots, which are 
read by optical scanners.2 So we couldn’t compare results by type of voting in 
that state. Instead, we checked the six other states with a margin between 
Clinton and Trump of less than 10 percentage points that use a mix of paper and 
machine voting: Arizona, Florida, North Carolina, Ohio, Texas and Virginia.

For each county in those states, we looked at Clinton’s vote share and whether 
it was associated with the type of voting system the county used, based on 
voting-system data compiled by a nonprofit electoral-reform group called 
Verified Voting and 2016 vote data from Dave Leip’s U.S. Election Atlas and ABC 
News.3 It doesn’t make much sense, though, to just look at raw vote counts and 
how they differed, because we know there are many factors that affect how a 
county voted, both in those states and everywhere else around the country. So 
we separated out two of the main factors that we know drove differences in 
voting results: the share of each county’s population age 25 and older with a 
college degree, and the share of the county that is non-white.4

We found no apparent correlation5 between voting method and outcome in six of 
the eight states, and a thin possible link between voting method and results in 
Wisconsin and Texas. However, the two states showed opposite results: The use 
of any machine voting in a county was associated with a 5.6-percentage-point 
reduction in Democratic two-party vote share in Wisconsin but a 2.7-point 
increase in Texas, both of which were statistically significant.6 Even if we 
focus only on Wisconsin, the effect disappears when we weight our results by 
population. More than 75 percent of Wisconsin’s population lives in the 23 most 
populous counties, which don’t appear to show any evidence for an effect driven 
by voting systems.7 To have effectively manipulated the statewide vote total, 
hackers probably would have needed to target some of these larger counties. 
When we included all counties but weighted the regression by the number of 
people living in each county, the statistical significance of the opposite 
effects in Wisconsin and Texas both evaporated.8

Even if the borderline significant result for Wisconsin didn’t vanish when 
weighting by population, it would be doubtful, for a few reasons. You’re more 
likely to find a significant result when you make multiple tests, as we did by 
looking at eight states with and without weighting by population.9 Also, 
different places in Wisconsin and Texas use different kinds of voting machines; 
presumably if someone really did figure out how to hack certain machines, we’d 
see different results depending on which type of machines were used in a 
county, but we don’t. And Nate Cohn of The New York Times found that when he 
added another control variable to race and education — density of the 
population — the effect of paper ballots vanished.

It’s possible nonetheless that the election was hacked, in the sense that 
anything is possible. (And the best hackers are experts in erasing their 
tracks.) Maybe hackers knew which control variables we’d look at and 
manipulated the vote in a way that it would look like it was caused by race, 
education and population driving different voting preferences. Maybe hackers 
didn’t manipulate the share of votes in individual counties, but rather the 
turnout, increasing the number of votes in counties likely to favor one 
candidate or another. Maybe some irregularities at the county level in early 
Wisconsin vote-counting are signs of wider problems. Maybe we’d find something 
if we dug down to the precinct level, or if we looked at other states with 
mixed voting systems. But at a time when the number of voters without 
confidence in the accuracy of the vote count is rising, the burden of proof 
ought to be on people claiming there was electoral fraud. The paradox is that 
in our current electoral system, without routine audits, seeking proof requires 
calling for a recount, which in itself can undermine confidence in the vote.



Sent from my iPhone

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