We present a simulation-based study in which the results of two major exit
polls conducted during the recall referendum that took place in Venezuela on
August 15, 2004, are compared to the official results of the Venezuelan
National Electoral Council "Consejo Nacional Electoral" (CNE). The two exit
polls considered here were conducted independently by S\'{u}mate, a
nongovernmental organization, and Primero Justicia, a political party. We find
significant discrepancies between the exit poll data and the official CNE
results in about 60% of the voting centers that were sampled in these polls. We
show that discrepancies between exit polls and official results are not due to
a biased selection of the voting centers or to problems related to the size of
the samples taken at each center. We found discrepancies in all the states
where the polls were conducted. We do not have enough information on the exit
poll data to determine whether the observed discrepancies are the consequence
of systematic biases in the selection of the people interviewed by the
pollsters around the country. Neither do we have information to study the
possibility of a high number of false or nonrespondents. We have limited data
suggesting that the discrepancies are not due to a drastic change in the voting
patterns that occurred after the exit polls were conducted. We notice that the
two exit polls were done independently and had few centers in common, yet their
overall results were very similar.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/09-STS295 the Statistical
Science (http://www.imstat.org/sts/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org