Landslide Denied: Exit Polls vs. Vote Count 2006
Contributing Organization(s): Election Defense Alliance
Author(s)/Creator(s): Jonathan Simon; Bruce O'Dell
Publishing Date: 2007-07-15
Issue Areas: Government Reform
Ownership/Rights Info: Please consult the copyright holder before using or repurposing this information.
File info: 24 pages; 270.42 KB file size
For many observers, the results on Election Day permitted a great sigh of relief -- not because control of Congress shifted from Republicans to Democrats, but because it appeared that the public will had been translated more or less accurately into electoral results, not thwarted as some had feared. There was a relieved rush to conclude that the vote counting process had been fair and the concerns of election integrity proponents overblown.
Unfortunately the evidence forces us to a very different and disturbing conclusion: there was gross vote count manipulation and it had a great impact on the results of E2006, significantly decreasing the magnitude of what would have been, accurately tabulated, a landslide of epic proportions. Because much of this manipulation appears to have been computer-based, and therefore invisible to the legions of at-the-poll observers, the public was informed of the usual "isolated incidents and glitches" but remains unaware of the far greater story: The electoral machinery and vote counting systems of the United States did not honestly and accurately translate the public will and certainly can not be counted on to do so in the future.
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Type/Format: Evaluation; Whitepaper
Language code: English


