Sri Lanka Election Analytics

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Ghost Voters

Higher Voter Turnout for Mahinda: Due to Enthusiasm, War or Jilmart?

In Sri Lanka’s 2015 Presidential Election, there was a higher turnout in electorates that favoured Mahinda Rajapakse. Maithripala Sirisena’s surprising election victory has been explained by many on the grounds that he was supported more enthusiastically in certain regions and by certain groups and that this enthusiasm had spurred his supporters to vote in larger numbers.  On the other hand, some of Rajapakse’s supporters were supposed to be less enthusiastic and fatigued with nepotism, autocracy and corruption. For instance, Jason Burke explained Rajapakse’s loss in The Guardian of UK as “The decision to seek early polls may have been more an acknowledgement of growing unpopularity… The benefits of economic growth have failed to reach the poor, especially in rural areas.”

However, if one studies the voter turnout and vote margins between the main contenders this notion of voters loss of enthusiasm for Mahinda appears to be contradicted. At district, and electoral units and for postal votes, there was a pattern of higher voter turnout in regions where Rajapakse was favoured.  Indeed, if voters had turned out evenly in all electorates, the lead of Sirisena over Rajapakse would have risen from the actual 3.7% to 4.8%.

This “pattern” of higher margins in areas which favoured Mahinda had been pointed out by Dr. Laksiri Fernando and others soon after the election – below you shall find the election results analysed more comprehensively. After the election, some argued that Mahinda had lost due to voter fraud in the north and east and this claim too is reviewed in light of the skewed pattern.

This pattern could be due to benign reasons or to the role of electoral “Jilmart” (or clever trickery). Many speculated on Jilmart before the elections even the Election Commissioner tried to discount it.   Let’s look at the evidence for this pattern before speculating about what may have caused this.

 

MAPPING VOTER TURNOUT AND MARGIN OF VOTES BY DISTRICT

The national average of voter turnout was 81.5%. The voter turnout ranged from 65% to 85% by district and from 41% to 85% by electorate. The war affected districts and Puttalam electorate had the lowest turnout (below 77%). The nationwide lead for Sirisena over Rajapakse was 3.7% but it varied by district from 70% in favour of Sirisena to 30% in favour of Rajapakse. Usually, voter turnout is not related to who was ahead in the polls.

CAPTION: Left –Each district is colored by the margin between the percentage of votes cast for Rajapakse and Sirisena. A higher margin for Rajapakse is shown in shades of blue and a higher margin for Sirisena is shown in shades of red. A margin of less than 7% for either candidate is left blank. Right: Voter turnout by district is shown as beige to deeper shades of red as it ranges from 65% to 85%. The data is from the Elections Department website. From the maps, we see that the districts with higher vote margin for Rajapakse (the bluer districts on the left) correspond to higher turnout (redder districts to the right). Conversely the districts with higher margin for Sirisena (redder districts at left) have lower voter turnout (lighter districts at right). The major exceptions are Puttalam and Polonnaruwa districts. We can look at the relationship more precisely graphically. CHARTING VOTER TURNOUT AND MARGIN OF VOTES BY DISTRICT The graph here shows the vote margin and turnout for the 25 districts. The difference between the percentage of votes for the main candidates is graphed against the turnout for that district. Consider the quadrants formed by the vertical line for the average voter turnout and the horizontal line for average lead for Sirisena. The data points are distributed preferentially in the top-right (12) and bottom-left (9) quadrants with only 4 in the other two quadrants.

CAPTION: The data points for the 25 districts shows the percentage of voters who favoured Rajapakse on the vertical axis versus the percentage turnout on the horizontal axis . The national average turnout is shown as a vertical brown line (81.5%) and the national average lead of Sirisena of 3.7% is shown as a horizontal brown line.
Puttalam is the exceptional district in the top-left quadrant – with higher favourability for Rajapakse and lower turnout. Polonnaruwa, Colombo and Kandy are the exceptional districts in the lower-right quadrant – with higher favourability for Sirisena and higher turnout. The exceptions of Polonnaruwa and Puttalam may be explained.
In Polonnaruwa, the high margin for Sirisena is because he is from there and has long tended the district. Polonnaruwa has the attributes that leads to higher voter turnout (including that Sirisena and his party were powerful leading up to the elections). This interpretation is confirmed by comparing this election with previous ones.
In Puttalam, the pattern is obscured because it has electorates which favour both candidates. Three electorates favour Rajapakse with moderate voter turnout and one urban electorate favours Sirisena with low voter turnout. The lead is near-zero for the district even as the urban electorate dragged down the turnout for the district.
Colombo and Kandy districts do depart from this pattern but only slightly in percentage terms –these districts matter because of the large number of voters. Colombo and Kandy have a historical tendency to vote for the UNP for unrelated reasons.
One cannot attribute this pattern only to the exodus during the war in northern and eastern districts. The voter lists have already been culled after the war – the Northern Province had already lost 206,000 from the voter rolls from 988,000 in 2010 and the voter-turnout factors this in. Migration, particularly in recent years, shall be a factor but it is not the only one as we shall see.
WHAT ABOUT THE POSTAL VOTES?
Does this pattern holds for the votes of government officers who are on elections duty? These voters are a more educated and resourced strata. The postal voting took place two weeks in advance and without foreign monitors. Their turnout is higher ranging from 94 to 99%. Here too the districts with higher voter turnout did favour Rajapakse and those with lower turnout favoured Sirisena. Once again, the results for Puttalam and Polonnaruwa were anomalous.
Postal voters are essential and present workers during the elections – and thus the skewed pattern in their votes supports the notion that emigration alone cannot explain this pattern.
WHAT HAPPENS AT THE ELECTORAL UNIT SCALE?
When we compare the margins and turnout of the 160 electorates, we found that the skewed pattern as well. The electorate scale analysis adds to what we have learned at the district scale.
If the results for this Presidential election are compared to those in in 2010 and 2005, then the relative tilt toward Sirisena is dramatic for Polonnaruwa. There is a tilt for neighbouring electorates such as Seruvila in the Trincomalee district, Vavuniya in the “Wanni” district, Hingurakgoda in the Matale district and those in the Anurdhapura district.
While the district-wise data from Puttalam do not fit the skewed pattern, the margins and turnout for electorates within it does. The northern-most electorate in Puttalam favoured Sirisena substantially (by 41%) and had lower turnout (68%). Nattandiya, Anamaduwa, Wennapuwa, Chilaw voted in favour of Rajapakse while having turnout around the 70-75% range.
The turnout in Kankesanturai of 42% stands out even by Northern Province standards – all other electorates exceeded 60%. Although this district too favoured Sirisena, there must be other reasons for such a drastic drop in turnout.
Colombo and Kandy District had electorates which favoured Rajapakse although overall the district totals favour Sirisena modestly. The pattern did not hold consistently for the electorates in these district.
There were many electorates which were influenced by the features described for Polonnaruwa, Puttalam and Colombo. However, the large majority of electorates confirmed to the skewed pattern. We can check the strength of the relationship between preference for Rajapakse and turnout with measures used by statisticians – the correlation is highly significant at the district scale and a tad stronger at electorate scale.
WHAT IF ALL ELECTORATES HAD EQUAL TURNOUT?
To assess the impact of the lower voter turnout on the overall lead, we can consider the hypothetical scenario of no voting disparities across districts or electorates. Under this scenario, we can estimate vote totals for each candidate, by multiplying the number of voters in the electorate, by the percentage of votes for this candidate and the national average voter turnout. In this event, the winning margin for Sirisena increases by approximately 120,000 votes. While the actual percentage margin in favour of Sirisena was 3.7%, in the hypothetical case it rises to 4.67% if the analysis is done at the district scale and to 4.8% if the analysis is done at the electoral scale. The difference is modest but if the results had been closer, uniform voter turnout alone could have flipped the outcome.
BASED ON THE POLL RESULTS, ENTHUSIASM DOESN’T EXPLAIN SIRISENA’S SUCCESS
Based on the district, postal and electoral analysis, we see a consistent pattern: in regions where Rajapakse garnered more votes there was usually higher voter turnout –the converse was true for areas where Sirisena was favoured. This is contrary to the common belief that the Sirisena supporters were more enthusiastic and therefore likely to have turned out in greater numbers. It is hard to reconcile this belief with the election results except by invoking electoral malpractice.
However, there are good arguments against serious voting malpractice. The Elections Commissioner and staff were lauded for their independence if not their powers, were on notice and alert about malpractice and worked proactively to tamp down on computer jilmart and to fool proof the voting process. The election monitoring groups such as CaFFE, CMEV and PAFFREL were active and registered large number of complaints particularly against the ruling party, and documented election violence and the undue exploitation of state resources (TV, bus services, vehicles) for campaigning. The JVP mobilized undergraduates in numbers to counter malpractice at the polling booth. Respected international observers travelled across the north. The Commissioner and international observers certified the elections as free and fair. Of course, all these actors and others did bemoan the inadequacy of power, protection and independence for the Commissioner and his staff and other government officials which could have affected less visible aspects of the elections. The incumbent lost here and this may be the reason why the concern about Jilmart got lost among other issues that arose since.
Since then, there are also suspicions that Rajapakse lost due to voter fraud in the north-east and double voting by these residents in the Western CoastThe pattern found here though does undermines this argument somewhat. If there was such a concerted effort to vote twice in the North-East and on the western coast, then turnout out and voter registration should have been higher in both places – instead the opposite holds in the electorates that favoured Sirisena. This argument is also weakened by the drop of 21% in the voter rolls in the Northern Province in 2015 from 2010.
The question of malpractice bears revisiting before we rule out its significance. Could it be that the electoral malpractices such as of impersonation, ballot stuffing, and fraudulent voter registration was not blatant but significant and systematic? In the fraudulent elections from Uganda in 2011 and Russia in 2011 and 2012, ballot stuffing too showed a similar skewed pattern Note, this sort of analysis cannot pick out inflation of the voter rolls which is a technique used to camouflage ballot stuffing.
Electoral malpractice may not be the only reason for such a pattern. There could be more benign reasons such as : 1. Impact of election violence, 2. Election boycott campaign in the North by some TNA members and even Rajapakse supporters, 3. Polling difficulties of displaced, refugees and temporary migrants, 4. Greater emigration from electorates opposed to Rajapakse, 5. Apathy of those who favoured Sirisena, 6. Poorer government services (including voter registration) for these who were not favoured politically, 7. A better resourced campaign by the incumbent, 8. The fair and unfair advantages of incumbency, and 8. under-estimated voter enthusiasm for Rajapakse. All of this warrants detailed investigation to which I hope others contribute to and help keep this issue alive as it is critical to the democratic system.
The investigations so far though does bring out the skewed pattern in voting raising questions about electoral malpractice unless we turn the conventional wisdom of Sirisena’s enthusiastic voters on its head.
The author, ZL Mohamed is keen to obtain polling division level voting data, other relevant data and interpretations via zilm at mail.com

Original Link-  https://www.colombotelegraph.com/index.php/higher-voter-turnout-for-mahinda-due-to-enthusiasm-war-or-jilmart/

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