Education and career
Foley graduated fromBlue shift
Foley coined the term " blue shift" after the 2012 election. An election law scholar, he had been studying closely contested state results to try to predict which might be challenged legally. He wondered whether votes counted after election day tended to affect the final count. He found that election-day vote counts tend to favor Republicans, while when provisionally cast or mail-in votes are counted, the provisional votes tended to favor Democrats; this results in a "blue shift" in final vote counts and the potential for results to change after election day. Foley did not find that mail-in or absentee votes favored either party. Studying results of presidential elections from 1960 through 2012, Foley found that a "clear and persistent" blue shift had occurred in each election since 2000. Foley theorizes that election reforms in 2000, which made provisional voting easier, favored some demographics that tend to lean Democrat such as lower-income voters, college students, and urban voters, who are likely to have moved since the last election and may not have updated their voter registration. He found that the size of the shift varied by state, but that it was consistent enough to potentially change the outcome of a presidential election. In 2013 he published a paper about the phenomenon, ''A Big Blue Shift: Measuring an Asymmetrically Increasing Margin of Litigation.''2020 presidential election
According to ''The New York Times'': In 2019 Foley published a paper, ''Preparing for a Disputed Presidential Election: An Exercise in Election Risk Assessment and Management'', in which he posited a scenario in which on election night, Pennsylvania is the crucial state and too close to call, though Donald Trump has a slim lead. As provisional ballots are counted, Trump's lead starts to evaporate and he becomes more and more agitated, tweeting demands that only the election night counts are valid and calling for his supporters to "STOP THIS THEFT RIGHT NOW!!!" "DON'T LET THEM STEAL THIS ELECTION FROM YOU!!!", calling it a plausible scenario. According to ''The Philadelphia Inquirer'' he believes "raising awareness of the blue shift can help inoculate people against unfounded claims." In March 2020 Foley and MIT political scientist Charles Stewart updated a paper, ''Explaining the Blue Shift in Election Canvassing'', which found that "the bluer the state, the greater the shift", which had first been published in 2015. Foley in August 2020 said expected increases in numbers of votes cast by mail because of theNational Task Force on Election Crises
Foley participated in a 2019 bipartisan task force, the National Task Force on Election Crises, to envision, assess, and develop plans for dealing with an election crisis. Among the scenarios considered but not included in the 200-page report was a pandemic that kept people from voting in-person. The task force published pandemic-related recommendations after the coronavirus pandemic struck.Book
*Foley, Edward. ''Ballot Battles: The History of Disputed Elections in the United States.'' New York: Oxford University Press. 2016. (978-0190235277).See also
*References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Foley, Edward B. Living people Year of birth missing (living people) 20th-century American lawyers 21st-century American lawyers Columbia Law School alumni Law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States American legal scholars Ohio lawyers Ohio State University faculty Yale College alumni