Elections have a dirty secret: Counting lots of ballots with absolute precision is impossible. Those infamous hanging chads from a decade ago are just one of the many glitches that can—and do—arise. Several states require a super- careful hand count in select precincts to double-check close results, and they nearly always find miscounted ballots. A few such slipups don’t matter, but multiple mistakes will alter the election results. Most laws leave the determination of the recount threshold to the discretion of registrars.

P The probability that you’d see the current error rate if the winner didn’t really win. If P is higher than about 10 percent, the result might well be incorrect, so keep double-counting more precincts.
n
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i=1
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i=1
The product of multiplying results for all the audited precincts (n). For each precinct, calculate the maximum possible error (U) and
. Then multiply all those ratios together.
ti The error rate you actually find in a precinct, as a proportion of the maximum possible error.
U The maximum possible error if every vote for the “winner” is miscounted and is really a vote for the “loser.”
Photo: Daniel Salo
Authors: Julie Rehmeyer