Kenya and the IRI: Tooting My Own Horn Edition
Nearly a year ago I commented on a Slate article that wondered why the International Republican Institute would withhold the results of an exit poll that suggested Raila Odinga had won the Kenyan presidential election. My guess:
The answer to Halperin’s question might therefore be depressingly simple: the IRI won’t release their polling data because they don’t want the wrong guy to win.
Now it looks like my supposition was right. Here are the key sections from Karen Rothmeyer’s “Meddling in Kenya” in The Nation:
The poll…showed that Odinga had bested Kibaki by an eight-point margin. This was in contrast to the official figures released later, amid chaos and allegations of rigging, that showed Kibaki winning by a two-point margin. Plans called for releasing the poll, the only one of its kind…the day after the election. But instead, IRI’s top Washington-based officials, claiming they had serious doubts about the poll’s validity, refused to make the results public. [IRI country director Ken] Flottman says he kept pressing for an answer as to why. “I was eventually told that it wasn’t in the best interest of IRI,” he says.
…
Why did US officials not take note of their own poll? Why did they in fact not just ignore it but suppress it? “The results were unpalatable,” says one high-level, non-American international official who declines to be identified because of the official’s continued working relationship with the US government.
See below the fold for the rest of the story.

