This is a continuation of this thread:
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http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=203&topic_id=225847&mesg_id=225847&page=>Comparing the latest exit poll report (1AM) from the Wash. Post
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/elections/2004/graphics/exitPolls.html>to the final one released by Mitofsky at 1:30 PM, a major adjustment was made in party weightings by changing Dem/Rep 38/35 to Dem/Rep 37/37. Obviously this implies an equal voter turnout between the two major parties, which was not assumed in any of the earlier versions of the poll.
From what I can see, all other weightings, including gender, age, race, national region and religion, were changed by 1% or less from the last unadjusted version of the poll to the final version and had a negligible effect on the candidates' margins.
The party weightings alone however, which simply reflect Democratic and Republican voter registration and turnout, would have reduced Kerry's popular vote lead from the 3% he enjoyed throughout the day, to a scant 0.6% in the final tally. While this alone didn't give Bush a popular vote victory, it would have put him closer to the margin of error of the poll so that such factors as ballot spoilage, uncounted provisional ballots and machine "glitches" could have eroded Kerry's remaining 0.6% margin, and given Bush a plurality within the poll's 1% margin of error.
For this hypothesis to be correct, we'd need to know one thing:
Was the Republican and Democratic turnout, in actual millions of votes, really about equal? This is where voter suppression comes in, because there are more of us than there are of them.
Nationally, we know about Registration Fraud against Democrats, which in effect "aborts" new voters thus reducing turnout. In Ohio, we know about voter suppression by various means, including fewer machines in Democratic precincts, changing precincts at the last minute, uninformed election workers accepting provisional ballots in incorrect precincts only to have them rejected at counting time, etc. These tactics of disinformation and chaos in Ohio can all be attributed to Mr. Blackwell. While most of the provisional ballots in Ohio were counted (23% were not), nationwide I believe this figure is somewhat less. And there are Cliff Arnebeck's and the Glibs' other Ohio allegations. Florida, as usual, is a lost cause but for the record, we've heard about absentee ballots getting lost, spindled, mutilated and destroyed, esp. in Teresa LePore's county. Who knows what else went on down there among the Dixiecrats, not to mention the ReShrublicans, in Jebville. IMHO, FL just can't be taken seriously when it comes to elections. Maybe Howard Dean can sort it out, along with the other 49 states he thinks we can win in, but he's a better man than I am!
If you believe that the above factors could have equalized voter turnout by depressing Democratic turnout, you don't need any other evidence of large scale hacking of the vote to explain the exit poll discrepancy in my opinion. Suppression, spoiled ballots and the uncounted provisionals probably account for Bush's lead, although of course, the vote is still unverifiable in many states due to the lack of a paper trail and this must be changed as soon as possible.
It would be helpful now to find an independent source of voter turnout , besides this one exit poll, to confirm this theory. Is there one, or is the whole country dependent on Warren Mitofsky's little "adjustments?"