| The
Carter Center Must Stop Pretending that It Speaks
for Most Venezuelans
Alexandra Beech (September
5, 2004)
September 7, 2004
www.sixthrepublic.com
www.veninvestor.com
Do Birds of a Feather Flock Together?
As the results of Venezuela's recall referendum surfaced
after August 15, the Venezuelan opposition claimed
that the government had committed massive fraud. Exit
polls by American polling firm Penn, Schoen, and Berland
Associates (PSB), the Primero Justicia (PJ) party,
and the Proyecto Venezuela party showed the opposition
ahead by over 18 points.
In a September 2nd article in The Economist, The Carter
Center's Dr. Jennifer McCoy dismisses the results
of the exit polls, writing that in a country "as
polarised as Venezuela, exit polls are risky. They
require those conducting them to avoid bias in choosing
whom to query, to avoid socio-economic bias in their
dress and speech, and to work in a wide variety of
neighbourhoods." Dr. McCoy's assessment of the
pollsters is very limited. Using her logic, volunteers
for every single poll would have arbitrarily chosen,
according to their own prejudices, six out of ten
people who said they voted for the Si option. Doesn't
this conjecture belittle the Venezuelan opposition
ability to conduct a fair and impartial exit poll?
What would the opposition have gained from conducting
a biased poll? Anecdotal evidence, which she employs
in her article, reveals that volunteers were trained
very specifically.
My sister, Juanita Beech, who volunteered for the
Primero Justicia party poll was trained to interview
voters during five phases. "For the first phase,
we interviewed five men and then four women, waiting
twenty minutes in between each interview. For the
second phase, we interviewed nine people, alternating
this time between men and women. We waited a specific
time frame in between each interview. Each phase changed,
limiting the number of minutes we waited in between
each interview, or the number of people we interviewed.
I was never allowed to interview more than one person
from a group." In total, Juanita interviewed
sixty people, and even though she volunteered in a
Chavista stronghold in Zulia state, her personal results
also demonstrated over 60% in favor of Si.
With this level of detail, volunteers did not have
the inclination to choose "dress and speech"
in their subjects. Moreover, volunteers, who were
generally professionals, understood poll objectives
and aimed to conduct an efficient poll, rather than
a biased one, which would have been a fruitless effort.
Moreover, McCoy's assessment of the neighborhoods
demonstrates alarming ignorance for an observer, since
it is a well-known fact that a variety of the polls
were conducted in low income neighborhoods around
the country, where according to her argument, Chavez'
supporters would benefit from his social programs.
Regarding the American pollster, Michael Barone wrote
for US News and World Report: "Penn Schoen has
no motive whatever for cheating. It is a reputable
American firm in a competitive business. Over more
than 20 years it has worked for successful American
politicians like Bill Clinton in 1996, Hillary Rodham
Clinton in 2001, Michael Bloomberg in 2001 and many
others."
Rather than a lukewarm and ultimately unacceptable
hypothesis about why the exit polls showed nearly
a forty point difference from the official results,
Doug Schoen of Penn Schoen was succinct in an interview
with Barone. "I think it was a massive fraud"
Our internal sourcing tells us that there was fraud
in the central commission." Milosevich committed
the same fraud in Serbia. "As a result, hundreds
of thousands of people died."
Carter Centers Consultant and Stanford Statistician
Admits Mistake in his Calculations of Recall Referendum
To substantiate the Carter Center's assessment that
no fraud was committed, Dr. McCoy cites Jonathan Taylor,
a Stanford University statistician. "We found
that 402 of 8,100 mesas (each with one to three machines)
had two or three machines with the same result for
the Yes vote; and 311 mesas had the same results for
the No vote. So the phenomenon affected both sides.
We consulted Jonathan Taylor, a statistician from
Stanford University. Using various mathematical models,
he predicted that 379 mesas would have ties (of two
or three machines) in the Yes votes, and 336 mesas
would have ties in the No votes. The error range would
be plus or minus 36 mesas. So the actual results fell
within the range of probability, and do not provide
evidence of fraud."
However, Dr. Taylor recently admitted that he made
an error in his calculations. Describing his "various
mathematical models" Dr. Taylor writes: "There
was an error in the figures quoted by the Economist
in an article written by Dr. McCoy. The figures were
based on the above parametric bootstrap model, and
the error was based on a mistake on my part."
Revising his conclusions, Dr. Taylor concludes: "it
seems then that the probability of observing 402 or
more ties for SI is between 1 and 3 in 1000."
Changing his melody if not his song, Dr. Taylor concedes:
"While this probability is small, I do not feel
that it should be interpreted as overwhelming evidence
of fraud." As analyst Miguel Octavio points,
"we have gone from "reasonable" to
"small", but it was the reasonable that
led the Carter Center to its conclusion. What would
they say now?. The CNE also used this result by Professor
Taylor to say that the Si vote coincidences were irrelevant."
Octavio also estimates that if Taylor were to calculate
the coincidences at the machine level, he would find
that the probability is even lower, if not impossible!!!
That should have been the case that the Carter Center
should have had him study to begin with!"
Another mathematical model by Dr. Elio Valladares,
a statistician at the University of Virginia cited
by Dr. Taylor in his corrections, concluded that the
probability of the number of coincidences reported
is about 1 in 10,000 when the problem is considered
at the machine (cuaderno) level.
Conclusion
Even though no one can deny that Chavez gained considerable
support by spending on social programs and nationalizing
immigrants, too many questions have surfaced concerning
the referendum. The opposition is not going to stop
questioning the results, as the New York Times suggested
it do only three days after the referendum. ("It
is time for President Hugo Chavez's opponents to stop
pretending that they speak for most Venezuelans.")
Far from being a failure for the opposition, the recall
referendum was a dismal failure for the Carter Center
and the Organization of American States. Had the referendum
been conducted on fair terms, few would question the
results. However, after three years of lost lives,
jobs, and time, Venezuelans cannot be expected to
swallow so many inconsistencies, including official
results which deviated from exit polls, recurring
Si votes, video images of soldiers tampering with
paper ballot boxes, paper ballots appearing on a highway
and cemetery, audits that never took place, and electoral
authorities who never hid their support for Chavez.
The recall referendum did not represent the will of
most Venezuelans, because most Venezuelans voted to
bring peace back to the country. Now, most wonder
whether any election will ever be fair. In a country
where the president controls the National Elections
Council, the Supreme Court, and the National Assembly,
fairness may not arrive for some time, either from
abroad or from within.
Si deseas publicar un art�culo, env�alo a articulos@11abril.com
|