Right on Time: An Electoral Audit for the Publication of Vote Results

Author:

Antenangeli Leonardo1,Cantú Francisco2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. George Washington University , Washington, DC , USA

2. University of Houston College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences , Houston, TX , USA

Abstract

Abstract The publication of electoral results in real time is a common practice in contemporary democracies. However, delays in the reporting of electoral outcomes often stir up skepticism and suspicion in the vote-counting process. This issue urges us to construct a systematic test to distinguish delays attributable to manipulation to those resulting from a limited administrative capacity. This paper proposes a method to assess the potential sorting of the electoral results given the moment at which polling stations publish their vote totals. To do so, we model the time span for a polling station to report its electoral results, to identify those observations whose reported times are poorly explained by the model, and to assess a potential bias in the candidates’ vote trends. We illustrate this method by analyzing the 2006 Presidential Election in Mexico, a contest that aroused suspicion from opposition parties and public opinion alike regarding how the electoral results were reported. The results suggest that polling stations’ time logs mostly respond to their specific geographic, logistic, and sociodemographic features. Moreover, those observations that took longer than expected to report their returns had no systematic effect on the electoral outcome. The proposed method can be used as an additional post-election audit to help officials and party representatives evaluate the integrity of an election.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Reference48 articles.

1. Alvarez, R. Michael and Jonathan N. Katz (2008) “The Case of the 2002 General Election.” In: (Michael Alvarez, R., Thad E. Hall and Susan D. Hyde, eds.) Election Fraud: Detecting and Deterring Electoral Manipulation. Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution, pp. 149–161.

2. Alvarez, R. Michael, Lonna Rae Atkenson and Thad E. Hall (2013) Evaluating Elections: A Handbook of Methods and Standards. New York: Cambridge University Press.

3. Antenucci, Pedro, Juan Matías Mascioto and María Page (2017) “PASO 2017 en la provincia de Buenos Aires: el recuento provisorio explicado,” Revista SAAP, 11(2):341–364.

4. Aparicio, Javier (2006) “Fraud or Human Error in Mexico’s Presidential Election?” Voices of Mexico, 77:7–10.

5. Aparicio, Javier (2009) “Análisis estadstico de la elección presidencial de 2006 ?‘fraude o errores aleatorios?” Poltica y Gobierno, Volumen Tematico:225–243.

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