Professor Walter Mebane at the University of Michigan has written aan (unpeer-reviewed) paper about this github data entitled "Inappropriate Applications of Benford’s Law Regularities to Some Data from the 2020 Presidential Election in the United States."analysis, Inappropriate Applications of Benford’s Law Regularities to Some Data from the 2020 Presidential Election in the United States.
To date I’ve not heard of any substantial irregularities having occurred anywhere, and the particular datasets examined in this paper give essentially no evidence that election frauds occurred.
This is as "expert" as you get. MyMy interpretation: "Nice try, but no."
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~wmebane/inapB.pdf Mebane teaches Election Forensics at the University of Michigan, and has published a paper about Benford's Law and election fraud.
Mebane is arguably the premier authority on this topic. In fact, it is likely that the person who created the graphs under discussion knew that Benford's Law could be applied to elections BECAUSE of Mebane. HeHe is the one that applied it to the Iranian elections to prove fraud.
Here is a link to a syllabus for the class that he teaches on election Fraud at the University of Michigan: http://www-personal.umich.edu/~wmebane/ps485/ps485_syl/ps485_syl.html
Many people like to cite this criticism of Mebane and his application of the law to elections: His work has been https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/political-analysis/article/benfords-law-and-the-detection-of-election-fraud/3B1D64E822371C461AF3C61CE91AAF6Dcriticised in the literature
But, but Mebane has responded to this herehas responded to this and everyone seems to miss it. I read this to say "your simulation isn't adequate to tell me that I can't do what I have already done with real data." but he does admitHe admits the utility of using Benford's law is an "open question." https://electionupdates.caltech.edu/2011/08/23/new-research-on-election-fraud-and-benfords-law/