After analyzing certain election results in Kansas, a mathematician found out there was some major election fraud. It was discovered that the fraud made the election go in a completely different direction for Kansas.
As reported by America Blog:
According to the Wichita Eagle, Wichita State mathematician Beth Clarkson has found irregularities in election returns from Sedgwick County, along with other counties throughout the United States, but has faced stiff opposition from the state in trying to confirm whether the irregularities are fraud or other, less-nefarious anomalies.
Analyzing election returns at a precinct level, Clarkson found that candidate support was correlated, to a statistically significant degree, with the size of the precinct. In Republican primaries, the bias has been toward the establishment candidates over tea partiers. In general elections, it has favored Republican candidates over Democrats, even when the demographics of the precincts in question suggested that the opposite should have been true.
Clarkson’s interest in election returns was piqued by a 2012 paper released by analysts Francois Choquette and James Johnson showing the same pattern of election returns, which favor establishment Republican candidates in primaries and general elections. The irregularities are isolated to precincts that use “Central Tabulator” voting machines — machines that have previously been shown to be vulnerable to hacking. The effects are significant and widespread: According to their analysis, Mitt Romney could have received over a million extra votes in the 2012 Republican primary, mostly coming at the expense of Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich. President Obama also ceded significant votes to John McCain due to this irregularity, as well.
This goes to show that those who make the laws in this country don’t care enough about the democratic process in this country, regardless of how inefficient it may be.
Source: America Blog
I spoke from 21 years actual working as a county director of Voter Registration & Elections. The county was predominately democratic, but they would vote for certain republican candidates if they were running
In the 21 years that I worked as the voter registration and elections director for our county, I saw it happen many times.