No Exit I used to despise
exit polls because I felt there was no good use for the information and plenty of poor
uses. For myself, only the final result mattered, so why should I care who some
network talking head projected to be the winner? More vituperously, no model of voting
behavior I could construct allowed for influence by exit poll reports, yet allegedly
millions of people are so influenced. I was never so jaundiced as to advocate that
we follow the example of France and some other democracies by banning the publication of
exit poll results before the polls closed, but I just shook my head at the waste of energy
and money for which I had no use.
In recent years, however, I have acquired a new reason to dread reports
of exit poll data. In cases of election fraud, there are varying levels of evidence,
from tainted or lost ballots to unaccountable electronic tallies. It is impossible
to conceive, however, of a serious challenge to an electoral result without widespread
and rigorous exit poll data indicating that a plurality of voters voted for another
candidate. The result of the 2004 presidential election in Ohio featured just such
data, contributing to a poisonous unease that I cannot
foresee ever lifting. We can fight
for more accountable elections, but even if Diebold and similar systems are categorically
rejected, I dont think Ill ever be able to watch live election returns again
without an icy trickle of bile in my gut. (Mon 06 Nov 2006, 17.50
PST) @ #