Forensic analysis of Turkish elections in 2017-2018.

With a majority of 'Yes' votes in the Constitutional Referendum of 2017, Turkey continued its drift towards an autocracy. By the will of the Turkish people, this referendum transferred practically all executive power to president Erdoğan. However, the referendum was confronted with a subst...

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Main Authors: Peter Klimek, Raúl Jiménez, Manuel Hidalgo, Abraham Hinteregger, Stefan Thurner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6173410?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-df9d97604d354ea0b1f5c90264c018052020-11-24T21:38:59ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-011310e020497510.1371/journal.pone.0204975Forensic analysis of Turkish elections in 2017-2018.Peter KlimekRaúl JiménezManuel HidalgoAbraham HintereggerStefan ThurnerWith a majority of 'Yes' votes in the Constitutional Referendum of 2017, Turkey continued its drift towards an autocracy. By the will of the Turkish people, this referendum transferred practically all executive power to president Erdoğan. However, the referendum was confronted with a substantial number of allegations of electoral misconducts and irregularities, ranging from state coercion of 'No' supporters to the controversial validity of unstamped ballots. Here we report the results of an election forensic analysis of recent Turkish elections to clarify to what extent it is plausible that these voting irregularities were present and able to influence the outcome of the referendum. We apply statistical forensics tests to identify the specific nature of the alleged electoral malpractices. In particular, we test whether the data contains fingerprints for ballot stuffing (submission of multiple ballots per person during the vote) and voter rigging (coercion and intimidation of voters). Additionally, we perform tests to identify numerical anomalies in the election results. For the 2017 Constitutional Referendum we find systematic and highly significant statistical support for the presence of both ballot stuffing and voter rigging. In 11% of stations we find signs for ballot stuffing with a standard deviation (uncertainty of ballot stuffing probability) of 2.7% (4 sigma event). Removing such ballot-stuffing-characteristic anomalies from the data would tip the overall balance from 'No' to a majority of 'Yes' votes. The 2017 election was followed by early elections in 2018 to directly vote for a new president who would now be head of state and government. We find statistical irregularities in the 2018 presidential and parliamentary elections similar in size and direction to those in 2017. These findings validate that our results unveil systematic and potentially even fraudulent biases that require further attention in order to combat electoral malpractices.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6173410?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Peter Klimek
Raúl Jiménez
Manuel Hidalgo
Abraham Hinteregger
Stefan Thurner
spellingShingle Peter Klimek
Raúl Jiménez
Manuel Hidalgo
Abraham Hinteregger
Stefan Thurner
Forensic analysis of Turkish elections in 2017-2018.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Peter Klimek
Raúl Jiménez
Manuel Hidalgo
Abraham Hinteregger
Stefan Thurner
author_sort Peter Klimek
title Forensic analysis of Turkish elections in 2017-2018.
title_short Forensic analysis of Turkish elections in 2017-2018.
title_full Forensic analysis of Turkish elections in 2017-2018.
title_fullStr Forensic analysis of Turkish elections in 2017-2018.
title_full_unstemmed Forensic analysis of Turkish elections in 2017-2018.
title_sort forensic analysis of turkish elections in 2017-2018.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description With a majority of 'Yes' votes in the Constitutional Referendum of 2017, Turkey continued its drift towards an autocracy. By the will of the Turkish people, this referendum transferred practically all executive power to president Erdoğan. However, the referendum was confronted with a substantial number of allegations of electoral misconducts and irregularities, ranging from state coercion of 'No' supporters to the controversial validity of unstamped ballots. Here we report the results of an election forensic analysis of recent Turkish elections to clarify to what extent it is plausible that these voting irregularities were present and able to influence the outcome of the referendum. We apply statistical forensics tests to identify the specific nature of the alleged electoral malpractices. In particular, we test whether the data contains fingerprints for ballot stuffing (submission of multiple ballots per person during the vote) and voter rigging (coercion and intimidation of voters). Additionally, we perform tests to identify numerical anomalies in the election results. For the 2017 Constitutional Referendum we find systematic and highly significant statistical support for the presence of both ballot stuffing and voter rigging. In 11% of stations we find signs for ballot stuffing with a standard deviation (uncertainty of ballot stuffing probability) of 2.7% (4 sigma event). Removing such ballot-stuffing-characteristic anomalies from the data would tip the overall balance from 'No' to a majority of 'Yes' votes. The 2017 election was followed by early elections in 2018 to directly vote for a new president who would now be head of state and government. We find statistical irregularities in the 2018 presidential and parliamentary elections similar in size and direction to those in 2017. These findings validate that our results unveil systematic and potentially even fraudulent biases that require further attention in order to combat electoral malpractices.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6173410?pdf=render
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