How Does Voting Equipment Affect the Racial Gap in Voided Ballots?
Authors: Tomz M.1; Houweling R.P.V.2
Source: American Journal of Political Science, Volume 47, Number 1, January 2003 , pp. 46-60(15)
Publisher: Blackwell Publishing
Abstract:
An accumulating body of research suggests that African Americans cast invalid ballots at a higher rate than whites. Our analysis of a unique precinctlevel dataset from South Carolina and Louisiana shows that the blackwhite gap in voided ballots depends crucially on the voting equipment people use. In areas with punch cards or optically scanned ballots, the blackwhite gap ranged from four to six percentage points. Lever and electronic machines, which prohibit overvoting and make undervoting more transparent and correctible, cut the discrepancy by a factor of ten. Judging from exit polls and opinion surveys, much of the remaining difference could be due to intentional undervoting, which African Americans profess to practice at a slightly higher rate than whites. In any case, the use of appropriate voting technologies can virtually eliminate the blackwhite disparity in invalid ballots.
Language: English
Document Type: Research article
DOI: 10.1111/1540-5907.00004
Affiliations: 1: Stanford University 2: University of Michigan

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