| > It is grotesque to call 2% a strong signal. It's a pretty strong signal of who won the election, given that we know that submission of fraudulent ballots doesn't work at scale. > As for voter fraud, I'm curious how you think it is insignificant without an audit. In is audited, continuously, by the fact that voters have to be registered and can't vote twice. Voter rolls are regularly audited by state election commissions to remove people who have died and/or moved out of the state, and there's no evidence of a non-negligible number of fake people making their way onto voter registration rolls. When two ballots are returned for the same person, or if a ballot is returned for someone who is known to be dead, etc, it prompts an investigation into how that happened. Not every registered voter votes, but by and large people register to vote because they intend to vote, so it's infeasible for a systematic effort to submit fraudulent ballots to avoid colliding with the real votes of the people being impersonated. > And even if it was, shouldn't the fraudsters be prosecuted? They are prosecuted. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2016/12/01/0-... And really, "grotesque"? That seems pretty rude. |
Did not mean it that way, my apologies. It was meant to be an hyperbole
>They are prosecuted.
You were suggesting not conducting an audit so they could not be prosecuted if we don't know who they are
>Not every registered voter votes, but by and large people register to vote because they intend to vote, so it's infeasible for a systematic effort to submit fraudulent ballots to avoid colliding with the real votes of the people being impersonated.
From what I have seen, only ~65% of registered voters usually vote. I am not convinced that impersonating part of that 35% is infeasible. There are also other ways to manipulate votes than to submit a ballot and hope the person does not vote, e.g. you could collude with UPS to lose ballots, buy votes, replace valid ballots/votes, etc.
EDIT: Take Wisconsin as an example. There is a 20k difference between the two candidates. 20k is ~0.6% of the 3.2m voters that voted (whereas the parent post stated 10k which is a very small signal)