I don't think I can speak to that with anything different from what's in the source tweets.
The really wacky points on the left of the graphs are in person votes, those are fine.
Then the mail comes in, shuffled, and it should be generally consistent. The argument is that farther counties arrive to centralized locations later than nearer counties simply due to travel time, and that nearer counties are more Dem, so as time passes within a state, D/R ratio decreases.
The travel time here is from local receipt location to centralized counting location, I believe.
I don't think I can speak to that with anything different from what's in the source tweets.
The really wacky points on the left of the graphs are in person votes, those are fine.
Then the mail comes in, shuffled, and it should be generally consistent. The argument is that farther counties arrive to centralized locations later than nearer counties simply due to travel time, and that nearer counties are more Dem, so as time passes within a state, D/R ratio decreases.
The travel time here is from local receipt location to centralized counting location, I believe.
Curious to hear if I'm missing something