We conduct statistical analysis of the rise in the number of votes counted after Election Day (“overtime votes”) and the growing tendency of these votes to disproportionately favor Democrats in presidential elections (the “blue shift”). We provide a historical description of these two time series, from 1948 to 2016, and establish that the timing of the persistent growth in the blue-shifted overtime vote began with the 2004 election. Variation in the size of the overtime vote is associated with the number of mail and provisional ballots and with the partisanship of the state, while the blue shift is associated with state partisanship but not with the number of mail and provisional ballots. Our analysis has relevance to post-Election-Day dynamics, especially in elections where a close election-night results that favor one candidate may yield to close final-canvass results that favor the other candidate. We conclude by discussing the conditions under which overtime votes counted in the 2020 presidential election could prove especially problematic.
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11 June 2020
Research Article|
June 11 2020
Explaining the Blue Shift in Election Canvassing Available to Purchase
Edward B. Foley;
Edward B. Foley
Moritz College of Law, The Ohio State University
Columbus OH 43210USA
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Charles Stewart III
Charles Stewart III
Department of Political Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge, MA 02139USA
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Online ISSN: 2689-4823
Print ISSN: 2689-4815
© 2020 E. B. Foley and C. Stewart III
2020
E. B. Foley and C. Stewart
Licensed re-use rights only
Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy (2020) 1 (2): 239–265.
Citation
Foley EB, Stewart III C (2020), "Explaining the Blue Shift in Election Canvassing". Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy, Vol. 1 No. 2 pp. 239–265, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/113.00000010
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