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Voter Protection Project: A Pilot Exit Poll for November 2006

Voter Protection Project
A 2006 Election Verification Exit Poll
A joint project of The Warren Poll, Ken Warren, Poll Director and
Election Integrity, Steve Freeman, Principle Investigator
In conjunction with Campaign Scientific, Stephanie Singer, Director
and Jonathan Simon and Bruce O'Dell, Election Defense Alliance

October 6, 2006

Proposal Overview

We will be conducting an exit poll to verify reported election results in selected precincts for the November 2006 elections. In parallel, we will be collecting registration data and election results from the precincts where we poll and tracking it up to the state level. Anomalies in this data will be an independent indication of whether irregularities have taken place. This is a pilot project so as to prepare for more comprehensive election verification efforts in future elections.

Verifying the accuracy of vote counts is essential to the democratic process. In nations where the vote count is suspect, international agencies often fund independent verification efforts. Exit polls, systematic surveys of voters who have just cast their ballots, are crucial to these efforts because they are, in the words of John Tefft, US Ambassador to Georgia, “one of the few means to expose large-scale fraud.” In nations with reliable voting systems, such as the UK and Germany, exit poll results are invariably within one or two percentage points of the official numbers.

Unfortunately, exit polls are all but dead in the US. For some time, only a single national exit poll commissioned by a media consortium of the five national news networks and Associated Press has been conducted. In 2002, the results were never released because the consortium “lost all confidence in the polls,” perhaps due to discrepancies with official counts in a slew of surprising Republican victories.

The 2004 Presidential election was marred by a 7 percentage point – nine million votes -- discrepancy nationwide. Statistical analyses by responsible teams of academics indicate count corruption rather than polling error. A few of the many indicators is that the discrepancy was significantly higher in battleground states, in Bush strongholds, and where more Election Day problems were recorded. Yet the consortium refused to release precinct level data that could have been used to investigate fraud. In 2004 we knew of the discrepancy only because of a technical glitch that prevented the pollsters from promptly uploading “corrected” results, i.e., results that have been adjusted so as to conform to the reported vote counts. In 2006 and future elections only such “corrected” data will be released even to media clients. Of course, once data are “corrected” as such, they are no longer exit poll results; rather, they misleadingly accord unwarranted legitimacy upon the official numbers.

An honest and transparent exit poll can provide confirmation or rejection of reported vote counts. Rigorous statistical design can separate bias in the polls from errors in the count. Such a survey can also resolve specific allegations of fraud in political jurisdictions and with voting technologies known to have a history of election irregularities. The entire process, survey design, raw data, and all analysis, would be open to public scrutiny.

America needs election verification. No less than (former) USSR Georgians, US Georgians have the right to know when voting machines have not yielded accurate counts and if an election has been tampered with. No less than Germans, British and emerging democracies, Americans need elections that are run fairly and that inspire confidence. Until our government provides a voting system that we can trust, a rigorous, transparent, public exit poll provides our best assurance of obtaining honest election results.

Contents

1. About Exit Polls
2. Need in the US for an Exit Poll Designed to Verify Election Integrity
3. Methodology
4. Components of the Polling Process
5. Budget: Exit Poll Items Requiring Funding

Click link [1] to open and download entire article

AttachmentSize
FreemanExitPollProject100506.pdf [2]420.83 KB

Cuyahoga Volunteers to Conduct Independent Exit Poll

This is What Democracy Looks
Like
 !


The whole world will be watching nextweek'selection,and Cuyahoga County's will be a major object of focus.  WCPN will host World Have Your Say here in Cleveland on the 7th and 8th.   Director Michael Vu was on Lou Dobbs on Sunday night and on CNN today.  And wait until the new film, Hacking Democracy, airs this Thursday? 

A few patriots have been tracking Cuyahoga County Board Of Elections over the past two
years and
 know that there is absolutely NO basis for confidence in the accurate and honest tallying of our votes by Diebold touch screen voting machines and the Diebold central tabulator.  The May debacle, the missing memory cards, the discrepancies among totals, the destruction of all May election data from the memory cards, and the refusal to post election results, the utilization of electronic voting machines in general, and the Recount indictments,
are but a few of the reasons we believe it is essential to have election-day vote-count verification (to the extent to which CCBOE and Kenneth Blackwell will let us.)

For those in or near Cuyahoga County, we must be vigilant this November 7th to make sure our votes are counted accurately! 

There are many opportunities for
citizens to be vigilant next Tuesday, and I'm describing yet another, one that focuses on protecting the vote count:

Vote Count Protection Project 

in conjunction with Dr. Steven Freeman and Dr. Ken Warren

of www.electionintegrity.org [3]

This project seeks to verify the vote counts on election day by, first, conducting simple Election Verification Exit Polls, and
second, having "inside" people jot down the machine
summary-report totals for the top 4 races and
1 issue.  So we need "inside" people: poll workers, election-day technicians and
observers, to capture the "system" data and record it on a simple data collection form.  We also need "outside" pollsters to ask voters to fill out a very short and simple questionnaire.

Sample data collection forms and questionnaires can be found here:

http://www.ohiovigilance.org/ProjectPost/CuyahogaPollDataCollectionForm.pdf [4]

and

http://www.ohiovigilance.org/ProjectPost/CuyahogaSampleQuestionnaire.pdf [5]

 

For more details
about this important project, see
http://www.ohiovigilance.org [6] or email me at victoria@wecount2006.org [7].

I am certain this project will be a fun, interesting and rewarding experience--a civic duty more meaningful than jury duty--and you'll meet lots of good people also engaging to restore democracy.  (There are other roles you can
play, as well, in the days leading up to Nov 7th and after the election.  We need techies to do analysis on election day and after!)

Victoria Lovegren, Ph.D.

Founder, Ohio Vigilance

Please forward widely!

P.S.  If you are not yet an "observer", we can arrange for you to get that status, in which case you can be inside the polls during the end-of-day closing procedures.


 



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Source URL (retrieved on 06/20/2010 - 5:39am): http://electiondefensealliance.org/voter_protection_project_a_pilot_exit_poll_for_november_2006

Links:
[1] http://electiondefensealliance.org/http
[2] http://electiondefensealliance.org/files/FreemanExitPollProject100506.pdf
[3] http://www.electionintegrity.org/
[4] http://www.ohiovigilance.org/ProjectPost/CuyahogaPollDataCollectionForm.pdf
[5] http://www.ohiovigilance.org/ProjectPost/CuyahogaSampleQuestionnaire.pdf
[6] http://www.ohiovigilance.org/
[7] mailto:victoria@wecount2006.org