[IP] A Far More Important Point About Tomorrow
Begin forwarded message:
From: "Stephen D. Poe" <sdpoe@xxxxxxx>
Date: November 1, 2004 4:59:01 PM EST
To: Dave Farber <dave@xxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: A Far More Important Point About Tomorrow
Reply-To: sdpoe@xxxxxxx
Dave -
Friedman raises a key point. Up until 2000, for the most part, we
trusted our elections, warts and all. What happens if partisan politics
(by both parties) wins out and destroys that trust?
Stephen
The Elections: Playing With Fire
November 01, 2004 1636 GMT
By George Friedman
We are now hours away from the 2004 presidential election in the United
States. Everybody has had his say, including Osama bin Laden. It is now
up to
one of the strangest -- and most successful -- electoral systems yet
devised,
a system made even stranger by the fact that there is no longer really
any
such thing as Election Day. A large number of voters will have already
voted,
which makes it a statistical certainty that some will be dead by
Election
Day. We have institutionalized the graveyard vote.
At this point, if we are to believe the polls, the most likely outcome
is
that U.S. President George W. Bush will win a narrow victory. As we go
into
Election Day, the spread of the polls is from dead even to Bush being
ahead
by 5 percentage points. There were few, if any, polls over the weekend
showing that Kerry is in the lead. In many of them, the spread is
within the
margin of error. However, when multiple polls confirm the same finding,
the
significance of the margin of error declines. Going into the weekend,
Bush
was ahead.
This should not be overstated. If he is ahead, it is only by a few
percentage
points. By past practice, the challenger normally picks up support over
the
weekend before the elections because undecided voters tend to support
the
challenger. The problem this time is not only that there are so few
undecided
voters, but that anyone who is still undecided after this campaign is
either
utterly indifferent, locked in a cave or deeply troubled. That means the
normal weekend flop might happen, but given the size and makeup of the
undecided vote, it is not clear that precedent applies. The last-minute
surge
will be small, and might easily split between Bush and Kerry or go to
Kerry.
Obviously, winning the popular vote doesn't guarantee victory in the
Electoral College. Therefore, it is possible Bush will win the popular
vote,
but lose the election. Large majorities in the states in which he has
strong
support -- the mountain states and the south -- make this a possible
outcome.
It is not a likely outcome, simply because the swing states appear to be
tracking the national polls, and because several of the swing states,
such as
Florida and New Mexico, appear to be moving toward Bush.
It is possible to imagine Bush winning by as much as 5 points and
winning a
surprisingly large number of states. It is possible to imagine Kerry
winning
by 1 to 3 percentage points and solidly winning the election. It is also
possible to imagine Bush winning by 1 to 2 points and losing the
election --
or very narrowly winning in the Electoral College. What is difficult to
imagine is the outcome everyone dreads -- a repeat of 2000.
It is necessary to understand the extent to which 2000 was a freak. In
order
to repeat 2000, two things must happen: First, the electoral vote must
be a
virtual tie, in the sense that except for one state (or more, but that
makes
the outcome even more improbable), all states are committed, without
giving
either candidate a majority. Second, the votes in that state (or
multiple
states) must come in at a virtual tie as well. That is what happened in
Florida in 2000 when the vote was tied.
On the surface, when the first vote was counted, Bush had 535 votes
more than
Al Gore. In fact, they had exactly the same number of votes. Any system
that
must count several million of anything has a built-in error rate.
Anyone who
has done inventory in a warehouse knows that no matter how hard you
try, you
will never get a perfectly accurate count. Assume, for the moment, that
with
your best efforts, you could count a million votes with 99.9 percent
accuracy
-- an incredibly dubious proposition, since nothing is that accurate.
Nevertheless, the Florida election came in as smaller than even this
preposterously high accuracy rate could accommodate. Count and recount
the
vote all you want, and as many times as you would like, the outcome
would
still be flawed. Human beings don't count millions of items at the
level of
accuracy needed to reach a clear conclusion in Florida.
Florida was a dead tie on top of a dead tie in the Electoral College. An
absolute tie might have triggered some sort of obscure law, but a
virtual tie
was simply something the law couldn't handle. It appeared that Bush won
or --
if different rules were used or a recount held -- that Gore won. The
fact was
you could recount as often as you wanted and get almost any outcome you
liked. The built-in error rate could take you anywhere.
In Florida, of course, the built-in error rate became the foundation
for a
challenge to Bush's victory. There was no way to deal with the reality
of the
matter -- it was a tie that would decide the election, so it was a
do-over.
Each side had to craft a legal argument demonstrating that its method of
interpreting the tie was the only legal way to do it. The Republicans
were
outraged when the Democrat-dominated Florida Supreme Court ruled in
favor of
a plan that would let the Democrats win. The Democrats praised the rule
of
law. All this reversed when the Republican-dominated U.S. Supreme Court
voted
5-4 in favor of what the Republicans wanted and the Democrats were
disgusted
with the utter partisanship of it -- forgetting that the four Democrats
on
the Supreme Court voted in as much of a partisan fashion as the
Republicans.
What happened in 2000 was a natural and unplanned accident. If another
state
had gone Republican or Democrat, then Florida would have been
irrelevant. You
needed two absolute ties to make this happen. The probability of a tie
in the
Electoral College and a tie in the remaining state -- a difference so
small
that it can't be counted -- is the least likely scenario.
The problem is this: While Florida was a case where no one could count
the
vote, a barrier has been broken in which challenging the outcome of the
election no longer requires an outcome below statistical measurement.
Both
parties have readied challenges to the legitimacy of the election that
would
seem to apply regardless of the count. The Republicans are challenging
newly
registered voters and the Democrats are going to challenge the
Republican
challenges. There are other issues on the table as well. For example,
the
Democrats have made it clear they don't trust the new electronic voting
machines.
In other words, the election could wind up in a legal tangle if it is
no more
than moderately close, but the difference is above the statistical
screen. A
cultural shift appears to have taken place since 2000 in which the very
legitimacy of the electoral system has been cast into doubt. There have
certainly been episodes of fraud in many elections in the United
States. The
miracle is not that there have been frauds, but that there have been so
few
and that the republic has survived them.
If we are to believe reports that have become ubiquitous, John F.
Kennedy
stole the 1960 election. More precisely, Chicago's mayor and leader of
the
Cook County Democratic Party -- at least by urban legend -- at the
behest of
Chicago Mafia chief Sam Giancana waited until it became clear how many
votes
were needed to give Illinois to Kennedy, and then whipped them up -- no
electronic voting machines needed. If the story is true, it would not
have
been the first or last time an election was stolen in the United States.
Richard Nixon lost that election. Again, according to legend, he was
approached by Republican leaders and told that he should challenge the
election. Nixon -- and if this is true, then it was certainly his finest
moment -- refused to challenge on the basis that even if he won, the
presidency would have been rendered worthless.
We are now reduced to this question: Where have all the Dick Nixons
gone? If
we are to believe what each party is saying, there are no longer any
limits
to which either party would go to challenge the election legally. That
about
puts the situation into context: Nixon had a finer ethical sense than
the
leadership of either party today. He let Kennedy steal the election
rather
than sully the presidency. The current crop would try to find any means
to
win the election, regardless of consequences.
We do not think that the factual basis of the 2000 challenge is likely
to
repeat itself. We do believe it is possible for a pseudo-factual basis
to be
generated. If that were to happen, it would be the most geopolitically
significant event we could imagine -- far more important than whether
Bush or
Kerry wins. Either one winning would be better -- regardless of who one
votes
for -- than a situation in which the United States is paralyzed for
weeks or
months by legal maneuvering and the new president takes office with a
sense
of scandal and illegitimacy hanging over him.
It was relatively placid in 2000 as years go, but 2004 finds the United
States engaged in global warfare. Were the United States convulsed in a
constitutional crisis lasting three months, the consequences would be
enormous, both in the perception of the United States and the practical
ability of Bush -- who would still be president -- to govern. If nothing
else, the intellectual bandwidth of the political system would be
absorbed in
the crisis rather than the war, and the war cannot be allowed to drift
for
four years.
One would expect the political leadership to be unified on one thing:
avoiding this. Even if the double miracle of 2000 were to repeat, it
could be
expected that the two parties would deliberately avoid a 2000-style
confrontation because there is a war on. We would expect them to
emulate the
spirit of Nixon -- not that high a hurdle, one would think. But the
fact is
that they are prepared to replicate 2000 regardless of whether the facts
repeat themselves -- and indifferent to the war.
A modest proposal presents itself: In the event that the election is
seriously contested, both Bush and Kerry should agree to withdraw their
names
from candidacy. They should then meet and jointly select a third person
that
they can both agree would be a suitable president, and ask their
electors to
vote for him.
We do not know either of these men and don't know whether their
ambitions are
such that they could tolerate this solution. Nor do we know if they
could
agree on a suitable substitute who could straddle the difference.
Frankly, we
think they are likely to fight for the last morsel of power. Possibly, a
political movement could generate itself in this country to force a
compromise.
What is clear is this: A repeat of 2000 is unlikely unless the two
parties
create one. They seem committed to that course. If they do, they will be
playing with fire during war. From an objective standpoint, a victory by
either candidate too substantial to be challenged by the lawyers is far
preferable to what seems to be coming -- a close election and the
country
torn apart.
(c) 2004 Strategic Forecasting, Inc. All rights reserved.
http://www.stratfor.com
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