tinyjo: (jasmine)
Last night, they were talking about voting as I lay in the bath listening drowsily to Radio 4. About the drop in turnout and the plans to revitalise it using postal voting, and possibly text message and online voting in the near future. Before I go on to ramble about my thoughts on this, I've got a poll for you to fill out.

[Poll #216990]

See whenever I listen to one of these pieces there seems to be an underlying assumption that the reason people didn't vote is that it's too difficult for them somehow. They can't cope with dragging themselves all the way to the polling booth. And I'm sure this is true for some people. It's just not true for any of the people I've talked to about their non-voting*. And no-one ever quotes the statistics, making me wonder if there are even any. Perhaps they just don't support the "it's too difficult" thesis.

To cap it all, I'm pretty suspicious of some of the alternative means of voting that have been suggested. There doesn't seem to be any way for me, the voter, to be positive that my phone number has been stripped from any text vote I make for example. At least at the polling booth I can make a visual check that there's no identifying marks on my slip. The same goes for online voting as there will have to be a way to authenticate me as me before I cast my vote - otherwise I could potentially vote several times or vote online and then at the polling booth later. Even postal voting has its risks - after all, I could easily collect and complete Alex's vote before he's woken up enough to notice it - although it is now pretty well established as an alternate means to vote. The risk is of a different nature here though - there's more possibility for electoral fraud, but anonymity is still preserved. The trouble is, no-one gives us the details. Trials of text-message voting and online voting have been postponed for the moment, but it's not an idea that's going to go away, because the politicians will do anything rather than believe that we just don't want any of them.

*If the BBC are allowed to draw sweeping conclusions from vox-pops of about 3 people in the street then so am I, damn it!
Do your candidates have to read spoiled ballot papers, like they do over here? I would like to see more people who feel that the available candidates don't represent a choice make their voices heard too - do you have any way to do that?

Spoilt ballot papers?

Date: January 5th, 2004 10:12 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] applez.livejournal.com
If you mean quality of the ballot paper that voters vote on, there's actually a strong spoil control.

If, for whatever reason, a person does not like the ballot they have received (in the mail for absentee-voting, for example) or just marked, they can get a new one, with their old one immediately destroyed. There is some additional processing time, though - of course.

If you mean political broadsheets - well, that's at least as old as media-politics itself. ;-)

Profile

tinyjo: (Default)
Emptied of expectation. Relax.

June 2020

S M T W T F S
 1 23456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
282930    

Most Popular Tags

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated January 16th, 2026 08:49 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios

Style Credit