Silver: How Do You Rig 11M Votes? Easily Ayatollah's argument against the possibility of vote fraud doesn't hold water By Nick McMaster Posted Jun 20, 2009 1:46 PM CDT Copied An Iranian woman holds a poster of the President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad under a painting of the supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in a rally at the conclusion of the Friday prayers, in Tehran, Iran, Friday, June 19, 2009. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi) Nate Silver has a bone to pick with the ayatollah. In his attempt yesterday to quash claims of voter fraud, Ali Khamenei asserted that President Ahmadinejad had won by 11 million votes. "How can one rig 11 million votes?" he asked. That's faulty logic, cries Silver on FiveThirtyEight.com. In the West, it might prove impossible given all our safeguards, but in Iran, it's actually pretty easy. "It is simply a matter of changing numbers on a spreadsheet." "Under these conditions, it is essentially no more difficult to steal a thousand votes than one, a million than a thousand, or 11 million than one million," writes Silver. Ahmadinejad's supposed winning percentage of 63% seems to be in a reasonable "sweet spot," neither too high nor too low. "That doesn't mean he stole the election—but it also doesn't mean that he didn't." Read These Next Russia tried to protect the tanker, but the US managed to seize it. Mayor rejects feds' account of deadly ICE shooting. Lego turned CES on its head this year with its latest innovation. Michael Rapaport wants in on NYC's mayoral race next time around. Report an error