All the President’s Myths
As I was working on this post, the Supreme Court smacked down the absurd Texas lawsuit. But I still think it’s worth posting just to go through the farce that was perpetrated on the courts, conservatives and ultimately the American people. On Thursday, Em eviscerated the legal arguments in Texas’ quixotic and now deflated lawsuit against democracy, I thought I’d take a moment — OK, quite a few moments — to eviscerate the statistical arguments that littered the legal briefs like fleas on a dog. Numbers can lie with a straight face in a way that people can’t. We believe numbers. They convey an authority that seems objective. But numbers can also reflect the biases and deceptions of those who produce them. And the biases and deceptions being used the Stop The Steal crowd are profound, deep and destructive.
Let’s get started.
Bellwethers
One of the most insidious statistical sins in our modern world is the concept of p-hacking. P-hacking is a practice where you pore over some data, looking for any correlation to jump out just by sheer random chance. The bigger the data set, the more likely it is that you will find something … anything. You can then proclaim — spuriously — that your correlation is extremely unlikely to happen and therefore must be real. But it’s not. It’s simply looking through thousands of Rorschach blots until you find the one that looks like a dragon. It’s rolling ten dice enough times that, eventually, they all come up as sixes.
A perfect illustration is the chocolate weight loss hoax in which a scientist did this deliberately: feeding one group chocolate and then measuring everything he could until he found some way in which the chocolate-eating group was better than the control group. If you look at 20 different metrics, the odds are really good that you’ll find a 1-in-20 thing happening just by random luck. And the press went all-in on his supposed discovery until he told them what he’d done.
There is a cottage industry in proclaiming that elections are easy to predict. Oh, I don’t mean people analyzing the polls. I mean people who run models that try to predict elections based on the economy, crime rates, prior election results and the astrological signs of the candidates. You’ll occasionally hear that Professor X at University Y has a model that correctly “predicts” 20 of the last 21 elections. I put “predicts” in quotes because you cannot, technically speaking, predict the past.
Now, those models are not useless. Nor are they pure p-hacking. They can reveal the kind of things that sway voters and give us expectations of what might happen in any given year. They can be useful as a benchmark to judge candidate performance: Donald Trump in 2016, for example, massively underperformed in these models. But their predictive power is extremely limited. Every year, some of those predictors crash and burn when they try their hand at predicting an election that hasn’t happened yet. Because ultimately, many of them dabble in at least a bit of p-hacking, combing through correlation after correlation until they find those that work, at least for the elections we’ve already had. So they can miss something important that didn’t correlate because of random chance or jump on something meaningless that appeared to be important just by random chance.
One of my favorites in this genre was a tongue-in-cheek one called the Redskins Rule. According to this rule, if the Redskins won the last home game before the election, the incumbent party would win. If they lost, the challenging party would win. Those of you of a mathematical note will have already seen the qualifying condition that it has to be a home game. With 32 NFL teams and two different venues, you can easily find something that correlates with election results if you look hard enough. And, indeed the Redskins Rule correctly “predicted” every election from 1936 to 2000.
But the Redskins rule was just p-hacking. If it reflected anything, it reflected that there was a brief period of time when our politics was stable, and the Redskins didn’t stink on ice. But it failed in 2004. Then it failed again in 2012. Then again in 2016. Then again in 2020. 1
A slightly less-dumb version of the Redskins rule has been repeatedly touted by the President and appeared in the brief he filed in support of the Texas lawsuit. The argument goeth thusly: no Presidential candidate has won both Ohio and Florida and subsequently lost the election. Therefore … something. I would actually think this was more of a self-own than anything else, because the President is basically admitting he blew a winnable election. But let’s take this at face value.
First of all, it’s not true. Nixon won Ohio and Florida in 1960 and lost the election.2 But even taking Ohio-Florida as a bellwether, this doesn’t mean as much as he thinks it does. Our recent elections have been close. But this was not always the case. Landslide elections used to be a more lot more common and thus winning Ohio and Florida simply reflected that the candidate won most of the states.
Since Florida became a state in 1845, the elections have gone thusly:
- In 16 elections, Florida and Ohio split (1848, 1856, 1860, 1864, every election from 1880 to 1908, 1920, 1924, 1944, 1992).
- In 16 elections, Florida and Ohio went together in a landslide, defined as winning more than 70% of the Electoral Votes (1852, 1868, 1872, 1912, 1928, 1932, 1936, 1940, 1952, 1956, 1964, 1972, 1980, 1984, 1988, 1996).
- In 10 elections that were close, Florida and Ohio went to the winner (1876, 1916, 1948, 1968, 1976, every election between 2000 and 2016).
- In 2 elections that were close, Florida and Ohio went to the loser (1960, 2020).
So, Trump’s argument here is that of the 11 prior close elections in which Florida and Ohio did not split, the man who took both won ten times. This is … an interesting bit of historical trivia. But it’s basically an argument that, in a close election, winning big states is a good idea.
We already knew that.
The Ohio-Florida bellwether is basically p-hacking with a very slim historical backing. We have 50 states. We have over a thousand combinations of two states. So just by luck, you can find some state or some combination of states that always appears to “predict” the Presidential winner. From 1904 to 2004, Missouri went with all but one Presidential winner. But that wasn’t because of Missouri Mojo; it was because Missouri was a contested state with lots of electoral votes. And it just happened to almost always align with the electoral winner. Other states have enjoyed their time as bellwethers: Pennsylvania missed only one election between 1800 and 1880; Illinois went with all but three winners between 1852 and 1996; Nevada has only missed three times since 1904; New Mexico only three times since 1912. But these weren’t really meaningful. Over any period of time, one or two states will always match the electoral winner just by random chance. And that chance is better in a state with lots of electoral votes or one that isn’t entirely in one party’s pocket.
Florida and Ohio have been a reliable bellwether since 1928. The Presidential winner has won Florida all but three times and Ohio all but three times. And only twice has he failed to win both. But this is not magic. This is not some law of nature. This is simply the way politics has played out. Bellwethers rise and bellwethers fall. And it is equally valid for Biden to point out that since New Mexico became a state, only one President (Carter) has won the election after losing both it and Nevada.
The claim that winning Florida and Ohio guarantees the Presidency is only slightly more valid than my claim that the Falcons will win if I don’t watch the first quarter. It’s an mostly appeal to superstition. It’s somewhat interesting if you are fascinated by the ebb and flow of American politics. But it’s not predictive. It’s not meaningful in the sense that, if the bellwether fails, that indicates something “suspicious” about an election.
We’ve been in a long era where Ohio and Florida were close enough to fight for and big enough prizes that winning them gave one a huge advantage in the electoral college. That’s of historical interest, I suppose. You’d much rather win both states with their delicious prize of 47 electoral votes than lose them. But past performance is no guarantee of future results. And it’s possible that their status as a bellwether is coming to an end.
Just as Missouri’s did.
You’re Not Supposed to Eat Wax Apples
One of the more common tactics of the pro-Trump side, one that found its way into numerous supporting briefs, is making bogus comparisons to claim chicanery. For example, Rudy has claimed many times that Pennsylvania counted 700,000 more absentee ballots than it sent out. But that claim is based on a comparison of the number of ballots mailed out in the primary to those counted in the general. These are not the same things.
Another claim is that far fewer absentee ballots were rejected in 2020 (a few tenths of a percent) than were rejected in 2018 or 2016 (a few percent). But this is also garbage. The few tenths of a percent figure represent those rejected because of signature mismatches while the few percent represents those rejected for any reason, including being mailed in late. It is as though you were comparing the number of interceptions thrown by one quarterback to the number of incompletions thrown by another. You’re not measuring the same things. When you do compare signature rejections to signature rejections and overall rejections to overall rejections, the numbers are very similar.
In Which Carl Sagan Says, “Whoa, Dude!”
Perhaps the most outlandish claim in the Texas brief came to us courtesy of Charles J. Cicchetti, Ph.D. In an analysis cited prominently, he claimed that the chance of Biden winning the election in Georgia, Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania based on the results Tuesday evening were 1 in a quadrillion. And Biden’s odds of winning those four states based on the 2016 election are 1 in a hundred quadrillion. His argument was presented in the Appendix here.
It’s hard to explain just how absurd this argument was. Basically, he took the 2016 election and calculated the likelihood that the same voting patterns would produce a different result. The method he uses is not unusual and can be used to make statistical comparisons under certain circumstances. For example, this semester, many universities gave exams in a hybrid mode — in-person for some students and online for others. One could compare the scores of those two groups of students to see if they were drawn from the same population of students. This might be a useful way to determine if online students were cheating on their exams. For example, if they scored better overall or fewer students got bad scores, that would show up in this kind of analysis. But it only works because the null hypothesis — that is, the assumption that you are testing — is that any random group of students drawn from the same class should score about the same on the same exam. It wouldn’t work if you were comparing, say, student from two completely different classes taking two different exams.
Another example where it might be useful: in 1996, Barry Bonds hit .308; in 1997, he hit .294. A similar but different method could try to determine if he was basically the same hitter but just got a little unlucky in 1997. But you wouldn’t use this method to compare Barry Bonds in 1997 to Mark McGwire in 1998 because they are, demonstrably, not the same person.
Comparing the 2016 election to the 2020 election in this way is absolutely completely useless because, and I don’t want to get too technical here, 2016 and 2020 were two different elections. We expect them to be different. The null hypothesis is not that the 2020 voters would cast their ballots in exactly the same way as the 2016 voters did; it’s that they would not. In fact, getting the exact same result in two different elections would be more suspicious, not less.
What’s more, this analysis implied that any change in an election is statistically impossible. If you argue that Biden winning Pennsylvania is suspicious because Trump won it in 2016, the same technique indicates that Trump shouldn’t have won it in 2016 because Obama won it in 2012. In fact, Trump’s win is more suspicious because Pennsylvania shifted by six points in 2016 but only one point in 2020.
Actually, no, it’s even dumber. Because the same analysis would indicate that every single state was stolen. In 2016, Trump won Florida by a little over a point; in 2020, he won it by 4 points. Using the Cicchetti method, that is a one a quadrillion chance. So, clearly, the Republicans stole Florida.
The analysis of early returns compared to final results was equally flawed. In fact, as Pennsylvania AG Josh Shapiro pointed out in his rebuttal, Texas’ brief rebutted its own argument. The analysis assumed that the people whose votes were counted on election day and those counted in the ensuing days were the same group of voters. But they weren’t. The Texas brief admitted this. It complained about it repeatedly. The absentee vote was overwhelmingly Democrat.
As I said, this kind of analysis can be useful. If you compared Barry Bonds’ 1999 to his 2001, you would find that he was a very different hitter. This is one of the arguments people use to claim that he took steroids. But that analysis works because you are comparing Barry Bonds to … Barry Bonds. The analysis in the Texas brief was like concluding that Barry Bonds cheated by comparing his career to that of Biff Pocoroba.3
And, In the End, The Rage You Feel, Is Equal To, The Rage You Make
Ultimately, just as Em argued that the legal arguments were garbage, the statical arguments were garbage too. This was not a document filed by a group of people trying to actually contest an election. It was a primal scream from a defeated President combined with a pledge of loyalty from the more spineless members of his party combined with a desperate hope that enough SCOTUS judges would be bedazzled enough or partisan enough or both to overturn an election or at least have a close enough vote that the Trumpists claim the Supreme Court stole the election. It’s no surprise that it was bounced as fast as it was.
As such, the arguments presented within were not arguments designed to prove anything because they couldn’t. Multiple recounts and innumerable court cases have shown that there is no there there. When people make bad arguments it’s often because good arguments are not available. No, these were arguments designed to muddy the waters. They were shit thrown at the wall in the hope that something would stick. Anyone who has dealt with conspiracy theories — and the idea that Biden stole the election is a conspiracy theory, nothing more — recognizes the tactic: make a blizzard of wild claims so that you always have one more to fall back on. I spent years going in circles on this with 9/11 conspiracy theories.
“What about the Pentagon?”
“They found pieces of the plane around the Pentagon.”
“Well, steel doesn’t melt at that temperature.”
“No, but it gets really really soft.”
“Well, there were debris and bodies in Indian Lake!”
“No bodies. And the debris could easily have been blown into a place only a mile away.”
“But what about the Pentagon?”
“…”
Conspiracy theories are a classic example of what Bill James called a “bullshit dump”; a way of reconciling what we know to be true with what we want to be true. Anyone who watched the Trump movement for the last four year noticed the absolute confidence his supporters had that not only was he right but that he would easily win re-election in a landslide. He lost. And so, conspiracy theories have sprung up so that people can reconcile what they know to be true (Trump lost) with what they wish were true (Trump won re-election in a landslide; eat dirt, libs!).
Conspiracy theories are dangerous and frustrating. But they are also profitable for those who peddle them. Seen in that light, these whack-a-mole games are not designed to actually reveal a conspiracy; they’re designed to sustain the theory. They are designed to keep the books selling, the speaker fees coming and the podcasts … uh … podding?
And in that sense … the Texas brief was a success. It didn’t change the election. I don’t think anyone involved — except perhaps the deluded naked emperor himself — thought it would. But it helped raise millions of dollars to pay off Donald Trump’s campaign debt and give him a massive political slush fund. It riled up his base so that they will regard any acts by the incoming President as invalid.4 And it will be used to push states like Georgia into making it harder to vote and almost impossible to vote absentee.
Because ultimately, as glib as it is to say so, the real complaint of the Trumpists was not that the media stole the election. Or that Biden stole the election. Or that big city Democrats stole the election5. Or that Dominion did. Or that the Courts did.
Their complaint was and is that the voters stole the election. All 80 million of those who punched their card for Biden stole an election that Trump was entitled to win because Democrats are just so awful and he’s so awesome.
And I expect that the ultimate goal here will be to make it so that those damned voters can never steal another election again.
- This has created the “revised” rule where, if the popular vote winner doesn’t win the Electoral College, the rule is flipped in the next election. The weaselly stupidity of this I leave an exercise to the reader.
- The President has since updated this argument to say that no President has won Florida, Ohio and Iowa and still lost but that’s also not true because 1960 still happened.
- No insult intended to the former Brave, one of my favorite players as a kid, who passed away earlier this year at the too young age of 66.
- Some hotheads … OK, Allen West … are talking about secession in the wake of the SCOTUS smack-down.
- I mean … have you met Democrats?
If you look at 20 different metrics, the odds are really good that you’ll find a 1-in-20 thing happening just by random luck.
Because I’m that guy: if all 20 are independent, there’s about a 64% chance at least one of them will happen.Report
Obligatory XKCD reference (https://xkcd.com/2383/).
And, as a bonus, http://www.tylervigen.com/spurious-correlations. I particularly like “Number of people who drowned falling into a pool correlates with Films Nicholas Cage appeared in.”Report
Emphasis mine. The experience in the western states where ballot distribution by mail is the most regionally widespread suggests that it’s a one-way path: traditional absentee balloting; no-excuse absentee ballots; permanent no-excuse mail ballot lists; vote by mail. My expectation is that states that expanded mail ballot distribution this year will find it difficult to justify why they are making voting so much harder.Report
I love it so much that should I ever consider relocating again, vote by mail will be a top ten consideration.Report
And it will be used to push states like Georgia into making it harder to vote and almost impossible to vote absentee.
They’re already talking about making signature-checking more stringent, i.e. tossing higher numbers of mail-in ballots.Report
We’ll see. 1.3M absentee ballots were cast in Georgia last month. Just over 1.0M have already been requested for the runoff elections. Maybe I’m wrong, but if I were a Georgia state legislator I’d at least think about it before I told a million-plus voters “I’m in favor of making it harder for you to vote.”Report
My expectation is that states that expanded mail ballot distribution this year will find it difficult to justify why they are making voting so much harder.
I hear ya, but this is overly optimistic. For at least the past decade the GOP has been on an overt crusade to limit the vote backed by the “will” of the people they represent or by subterfuge. And the justification in each case is the same: to make it harder for Democrats to vote. I think what the Trump years have demonstrated is that Republicans can engage in the most anti-Democratic behavior imaginable without consequence. They’ll keep getting elected. My guess is that partisan voter suppression will continue until conservatives stop supporting the GOP on election day.Report
Yeah, quite possibly optimistic. Living in a region where Arizona’s GOP installed a permanent absentee ballot list that grew to cover 80% of voters. Where Montana’s GOP did the same thing to cover 75% of voters. Where Colorado’s GOP did the same thing and after the Dems installed full vote by mail later, the GOP voters polled at 75% in favor of it. Where Utah’s GOP adopted full-on vote by mail.
I am also known to say, “Sometimes I feel like I live in a different country.”Report
I think we should probably stop thinking of Florida as a swing state. It’s tight, and I can understand why Democratic campaigns would target it. It’s got a Moneyball appeal. But it’s been pretty reliable for the Republicans, and is only getting moreso.
As for Cicchetti’s analysis, I looked it over, and I don’t think his description was detailed enough for someone to recreate it. But I would have loved to have seen its predictive power for the 2016 election. There’s a principle in economics call the Lucas critique, which says basically that any model that’s very accurate for a given set of conditions will be less accurate for another set of conditions. Very few people predicted Georgia before November 2020, but very few predicted Michigan before November 2016.
To me it comes down to this: the 2020 results could be explained by fraud, or by massive intense hatred of Trump. I’ve seen massive intense hatred of Trump for four years. That doesn’t disprove fraud, but it explains the results.
And one side note. I could tell that the results on Election Night were going to be garbage, so even though I’m a political junkie, I didn’t watch a bit of it. I think that saved me. Minute-by-minute results really seem to have screwed people up.Report
I agree. I haven’t staked hope in FL since 2020 (my first American Election!) I always assume it’ll go red and none of my surprises have never been unpleasant.
I think that most honest political junkies knew that the picture we got on Election night would only tell us 1 thing: Wipeout Election or not. But for any election watcher tuning in 2 days later would have saved a lot of elevated blood pressure. The problem was for all the non-political junkie election watchers. To anyone who hadn’t been following the commentary and horserace reporting for up to a month ahead of time the election was very confusing but the political reporting was very up front that the nature of the voting this year would produce results that shifted and swung dramatically.Report
That was exacerbated by two things:
1.Trump’s fulminations against mail-in voting, resulting in those votes skewing Democratic.
2. The GOP-driven laws in many states that mail-in votes be counted late.
I’d see this as a joint plot to spread fear, uncertainty, and doubt if I thought they were that smart and able to coordinate their efforts.Report
I agree in general.Report
The Democrats didn’t do a very good job of appealing to the LatinX community in Florida. They should have played up NAFTA more.Report
“Hey, we CARE about you folks. BTW did you know that referring to yourselves as “latinos” oppressively genderizes non binary members of your community?”Report
Warren would have gotten rolled with that demo.Report
I don’t think that NAFTA would have moved the needle much with the Cuban and Venezuelan expats.Report
They should be more open-minded.Report
Biden had nothing to compete with this song.Report
As a person whose native language is Spanish, LatinX is one of the most stupid, most culturally insensitive, well meaning but totally clueless gringos have ever done. Way worse than Hawaiian Pizza or whatever the issue was with the sushi in Oberlin that triggered Rod Dreher a couple of years ago.
Except for certain limited exceptions like cows and bulls, every group that includes members of more than one gender (there’s no upper limit to the number of genders in the group, as long as there’s more than one) is referred to using the male gender suffix. End of story. Anything else sounds stupid to us, probably because it is.
We are not going to change our language to assuage the sensibilities of clueless Americans. If you want to honor the Latino culture and heritage, that’s great, go learn about it. If you want to change it so that it looks better to you, well that’s as imperialist as the things you were supposed to be fighting.
[Excuse me, is there a place nearby where I can tie my high horse while I grab a coffee, pard’ner?]Report
We’ll get you using LatinX in your day to day language.
If we have to pass an English Language Only law to do it, then that’s what we’ll do.
And you will thank us.Report
Yeah, it’s mostly used by gringxs locxs.
An important thing to understand here is that it’s not a racial politics word. It’s a gender politics word. Feminists don’t care that you don’t like it, because it’s for them, not for you. Rest assured that the words they’ve shoehorned into the English lexicon sound just as nutty to native English speakers as Latinx does to you.Report
It’s not clear to what extent gringos are to blame — the history is murky but seems to have been initially driven by certain “latinx-Americans” and promoted by the SJ left more broadly from there.
My daughter is a social worker in NYC and works largely with Latino/a/e/x communities — she and many of her colleagues recognize the unsatisfactory nature of this word, but it’s so established as the correct term that everyone is basically powerless to change it. That’s culture for you.Report
I suppose it’s useful to know that in Spanish, just as in English, the “collective masculine” has been long entrenched. In English, we’re working toward some sort of convenient way around that for good reasons and “but it has always been this way” is not much of a reason not to do it. I assume that one of these days a similar thing will happen in Spanish. While the process is ongoing, there will be some awkwardness and some failed solutions. That’s just how language change works. Let’s all chill out.Report
I suspect it is less about the change and more the appearance of a change being forcedimposed by people who are not native speakers of the language.Report
Not just any people, but people who seem kind of crazy and who enjoy being a-holes about it.Report
This is overstating things — the vast majority of language change is organic and driven by the accumulation of subtle differences within a speech community. This sort of purposive, culturally-mandated change certainly happens from time to time (with varying degrees of success) but is far from the norm.Report
As far as I can tell, “organic” change is change either that happened long enough ago or that the speaker likes.Report
You’re welcome to think that; but you might reflect on your reaction to people without a law degree who make sweeping statements about legal matters, and realize that in this case you’re playing that role.Report
Which experts am I challenging on their own turf?Report
Right. That’s how Newspeak works.Report
Sure, just ask the job creators.Report
Those are definitely letters and punctuation that you typed into your keyboard, I’ll give you that. But out of curiosity, do they mean anything to you?Report
Fake news! Freedom fries!Report
Maybe if you told me what you wanted to be giving examples of, we could work together on this.Report
The problem is that, Latinx is a very special generic word created just for the purpose of encompassing Latinos of different genders.
It doesn’t solve the “collective masculine” issue. A group of many gendered doctors is a group of “doctores”, just like a group exclusively male doctors. Likewise “cachorros” is a litter of mixed male and female puppies, or a litter of only male puppies. (*)
Unless we start speaking of doctorx or cachorrx, we haven’t done really anything to solve the collective masculine noun issue in Spanish. It is very unlikely Latinx is going to get incorporated into Spanish, except as a frowned upon anglicism.
(*) There has been initiatives to replace the collective masculine in Spanish with actually mentioning both genders. Hence “doctores y doctoras” (or “cachorros y cachorras”). Besides being clumsy and long winded, it also sounds demeaning of women, like they have to be added separately and specifically, because otherwise it would be assumed they are excluded -unless you specify that there are doctoras around, it s to be assumed only men can be doctors.
Chávez was a big proponent of the naming both genders school, and all Venezuelan legislation since goes out of its way to specify both genders at every occasion. Imagine an electoral code that said:
“Male voters and female voters should show their voting registration certificate to the male election clerk or the female election clerk before going to the voting booth. Voting registration certificates are issued by the state’s male Secretary of State or female Secretary of State”Report
LatinX may well not be the solution. I’m not advocating it myself, and generally use other expedients. But I put no great stock in my own practice. Then again, I’m not getting exercised about it. If LatinX catches on, fine. If it doesn’t, also fine. It’s not up to me, and I don’t want it to be.Report
I have read that in different parts of the US, the “Latin” population prefers different things. I don’t recall the details of the size of the majorities. In Southern California and Arizona, the preferred term was “Mexican-American”. In Florida, “Latin-American”. In some other areas, “Hispanic”. All of them reflect where ancestors came from. All of them avoid the gender problem.
I try to use Hispanic based on the language. And yes, because I had the benefit of a roommate in graduate school who grew up in California* speaking both English and Spanish, and was working on his PhD in linguistics, to know that some aspects of the language can change dramatically when you cross a border: “This is a fine phrase to use in Central American country A, but it’s a serious insult in country B.”
* After both of us finished two years of graduate school in Texas we took three weeks off in California because who knew when we might get an extended vacation again. When I woke up hungry one of the first nights at his mom’s, I rummaged through the refrigerator and came up with flour tortillas and chili. I was heating a tortilla over a burner on the gas stove, flipping it bare-handed so it didn’t burn, before I smeared on the chili. I suddenly realized my roommate’s mom was standing in the doorway watching me. She said, “You are entirely too pale and butcher what little Spanish you speak too badly to know how to do that that well.”Report
Given how down ballot races in Republican areas still went for Republicans, there’s really no way to call it fraud. Hell, Republicans GAINED seats in the House in a race their President lost. You’d think Democrats – if they were committing massive national fraud – would have done something about that.
Were George T still here he’d no doubt be running on about how that constitutes a brilliant false flag operation from a senile President-elect who can’t articulate his words. I miss him sometimes . . . .Report