1 / 33

The Future of Election Reform (in light of the 2012 elections)

The Future of Election Reform (in light of the 2012 elections). Ned Foley & Steven Huefner The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law Election Law @ Moritz www.electionlaw.osu.edu. The Future of Election Reform. * Early and Absentee Voting in 2012 Trends and Trade-offs

Télécharger la présentation

The Future of Election Reform (in light of the 2012 elections)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Future of Election Reform(in light of the 2012 elections) Ned Foley & Steven Huefner The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law Election Law @ Moritz www.electionlaw.osu.edu

  2. The Future of Election Reform * Early and Absentee Voting in 2012 Trends and Trade-offs * Long Lines at Polling Places in 2012 Nature and Extent of Problem * Post-election Considerations The “Blue Shift” and Its Implications * Reform Prospects and Obstacles

  3. Early and AbsenteeVoting in 2012 Trends and Tradeoffs

  4. [courtesy Charles Stewart, MIT]

  5. [courtesy Charles Stewart, MIT]

  6. [courtesy Charles Stewart, MIT]

  7. Modes of Voting – 2000 [courtesy Charles Stewart, MIT] 2000 (CPS)

  8. Modes of Voting – 2012 [courtesy Charles Stewart, MIT] 2012 (SPAE)

  9. Long Lines atPolling Places in 2012 Nature and Extent of Problem

  10. 13 min = avg. Election Day wait 63% said most of this time was waiting to check in [20 min = avg. early voting wait] [courtesy Charles Stewart, MIT]

  11. How Long Did People Wait? [courtesy Charles Stewart, MIT]

  12. How Long Did People Wait? Average waiting time for the 3% who waited more than an hour = 129 minutes

  13. [courtesy Charles Stewart, MIT]

  14. Post-Election Considerations The “Blue Shift” andIts Implications

  15. Swing State Gains

  16. Blue Gain States v. Red Gain States

  17. 1960 Election Gains

  18. Uncounted ballots: Ohio, 2008 & 2012 *2008 includes both wrong location and right location **2012 is only wrong location, because of court order on right location ballots *** envelope unsigned, or lacking printed name, or both

  19. Uncounted (& Disputable) Ballots All Ohio numbers from Secretary of State website; 12 Florida from new Smith/Herron data; 08 Florida is domestic only, as reported in EAC Election Day Survey

  20. 2008

  21. 2008 provisional ballots

  22. X(PB cast rate), Y(PBs rejected/all ballots)

  23. Y(PBs counted/PBs cast) X(PB cast/all ballots)

  24. Y(PBs counted/all ballots) X(PBs cast/all ballots)

  25. Y(“gain during canvass”) X(PBs cast/all ballots)

  26. X(absentee cast rate)/Y(“gain”)

  27. X(ABR+PBR)/Y(“gain”)

  28. X(ABR*PBR)/Y(“gain”)

  29. Evaluating DemocracyPew Election Performance Index

  30. Reform Prospects and Obstacles

More Related