If, instead of looking at all the states, we examine only those where the shift in either direction is statistically significant, we would find 12 states (Utah, Missouri, Ohio, South Carolina, Wisconsin, Colorado, Iowa, Kentucky, Oregon, North Carolina, Washington, and Pennsylvania) with significant red shifts, but no states with significant blue shifts. The probability of 12 significant red shifts and zero significant blue shifts is one in 4,096, less than half of one percentage point. There is better than a 99.5% chance that such an outcome would not occur if both the vote count and exit polls were in sync.
Of the 20 Senate races, 11 had significant red shifts, none had significant blue shifts, virtually the same lopsided and unlikely pattern as the presidential results.
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2.
Simple table of crucial exit polls vs. reported vote tallies.
Exit Polls from November 8 Election Show Patterns Indicating Possible Electronic Election Rigging in Favor of Republicans
November 11, 2016
By Jonathan Simon
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Commentary by Pokey Anderson: Just to look at one state, the state that vaulted Trump over the 270 electoral vote finish line, Wisconsin, in the table:
WisconsinExit Poll Margin in favor of Clinton + 3.9%
Reported Vote Count 1% in favor of Trump
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