A Mathematical Look at the Election

ByABC News
November 10, 2000, 3:56 PM

Nov. 13 -- Is there anything left to say about the torrent of vote numbers and exit polls that have washed over us the last couple of days? A few random observations come to mind.

The Electoral College should probably be abolished, but the chaos of the recount in Florida suggests one defense for it. If the popular vote determined the victor, any comparably close national election would call for a national recount. Imagine going through the returns precinct by precinct, county by county, state by state. At least now the tempest is confined to Florida alone.

The results in other states are close and the Bush campaign has hinted that it might demand recounts in Wisconsin, Iowa, and Oregon. A recount in these states, however, is much less likely to change the outcome since the differences in vote totals are bigger there and the states are much smaller.

Get a Grip on the Numbers

With nearly 6,000,000 votes cast in Florida and roughly 300 votes (as of this writing) separating the candidates, the difference between them is less than one part per 20,000. Both Bush and Gore like to jog, so to get a grip on how small a margin this is, lets imagine them competing in a mile-long race. Dividing the mile into 20,000 parts, we find that each part would be about 3 inches long, the margin of victory. Talk about a photo finish!

Another way to look at it is to realize that the difference between the Florida vote totals of Gore and Bush (if we ignore Nader and Buchanan) is what we would expect if the approximately 6 million voters flipped a coin to determine their votes.

The spike in the number of Buchanan voters in Palm Beach County is extremely unlikely. A non-statistical measure of this unlikelihood is that Buchanan said on NBCs Today show that he believed most of the 3,407 votes he got in Palm Beach County belonged to Gore and that many people voted for him by mistake.

The networks calling Florida prematurely was likely the result of the uncertain, ever-changing demographics of the state. Unlike Pennsylvanias population, for example, which is quite stable, Floridas is bolstered every year by a large number of new residents hordes of retirees, people moving from other states, immigrants from South America and elsewhere. Computer models of electorates work better on stable populations that stay put and vote the same way from election to election.