Durka wrote: ↑Mon Nov 11, 2024 1:50 pm
You are probably a greater follower of US politics than I am, but you've raised an issue that I was thinking about when the election results were being updated this time. Last time, my recollection is that in the swing states, or at least in some of them, Trump had a lead, then for a day or so after the polls had closed, truck loads of postal votes were counted which were heavily in favour of Biden, which swayed the balance. That's what gave Trump ammunition for his argument. Is my recollection correct?
This time, that did not occur. I didn't see any reports saying that we haven't counted postal votes yet. Each state had progressive updates as to what percentage of the votes had been counted, so they must have known then how many people had voted by post. Were procedures changed this time, so that the cut off date for postal votes were not so close to the day of the election?
The most immediately obvious reason for a reduction in postal votes would be that the 2020 election occurred in the midst of the pandemic, so many people would have chosen to stay home. There were also a few initiatives passed in Republican-run states to restrict postal voting this time around (including other attempts at voter suppression such as voter ID laws), so it's possible they had some effect, though it seems unclear to what extent if so:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Republica ... l_election
According to this link, at least 87.9 million postal or pre-polling day votes were cast this election out of the 146.1 million that have been counted so far:
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2024-e ... early-vote
Last year, the equivalent figure was 108.4 million out of 155.5 million total, based on this report:
https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files ... l_508c.pdf
Some more stats, including Trump vs Biden postal vote figures, here:
https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/20 ... e-in-2020/
Various plausible reasons for the discrepancy between postal votes for Biden vs Trump last time around (58% and 32% respectively) include that "Blue" states had more COVID restrictions than "Red" states; that Democratic Party voters were more likely to consider COVID a health risk than Republican Party voters, thus having more incentive to stay home; and that Trump explicitly politicised postal voting in the lead-up to the election, calling its integrity into question, which undoubtedly influenced the choices of his supporters. Absent the context of the pandemic, none of those applied this time around.
In terms of when the postal votes were counted, my understanding is that several efficiency measures were put in place for this election in various states to make counting faster, so that may also have been a factor in post-count swings. But anyone paying attention to election counting here in Australia as in any other country would already understand that this is a common occurrence, as are seemingly sudden shifts when metropolitan vs rural polling places finish counting.
I suspect that much of this conspiracy theorising, putting to one side the cynical opportunism of Trump and his inner circle, comes down to lack of electoral literacy. For instance, I've seen countless discussions on social media in the immediate aftermath of the election taking conclusions about turnout from clearly incomplete voting totals: people simply don't seem to realise that, even though the election has already been decided, voting is continuing and published totals are provisional. Similarly, I suspect too many people were watching the votes being counted on TV as if it were a football game, unaware that apparent voting leads on election night held by Trump in swing states were far from settled.
I don't think much of American cable news, but at least they do actually explain this stuff while you're watching. Unfortunately, previously uncontroversial factual information like that is just another fatality of the "fake news" era, where "the internet" is deemed more trustworthy than journalists – who, whatever their other failings, might at least understand some of what they're talking about.
"Every time we witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be passive in its presence." – Julian Assange