(no subject)
Apr. 5th, 2005 10:18 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The UK follows the US's lead in making voting fraud easier. Or one more reason why I won't be voting Labour, no matter how scared I am of a Michael Howard government (*). It's not the fact that the fraud was perpetrated by Labour in this case - as the article rightly points out, "other experts say the fraud is not confined to particular communities, or to Birmingham, or to the Labour Party" - it's the fact that it was Labour who brought in the rules to allow more people to vote by post, without any of the safeguards that such a move needs.
My freedom is not safe in the hands of these people.
Edit: (*) for the record, I'll be voting Lib Dem unless something very unexpected happens between now and then. But I'm expecting the 'anyone but Michael Howard' campaign to do a similar thing to the 'anyone but Bush' one in the US, and try to persuade people that voting for any aprty other than Labour is effectively a vote for the Tories. Which may have some validity, but tough.
My freedom is not safe in the hands of these people.
Edit: (*) for the record, I'll be voting Lib Dem unless something very unexpected happens between now and then. But I'm expecting the 'anyone but Michael Howard' campaign to do a similar thing to the 'anyone but Bush' one in the US, and try to persuade people that voting for any aprty other than Labour is effectively a vote for the Tories. Which may have some validity, but tough.
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Date: 2005-04-05 09:28 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-05 09:35 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-05 11:06 am (UTC)Also, I think we really need PR to curb overweening parties with big majorities that allow them to do as they like.
Soph
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Date: 2005-04-05 09:50 am (UTC)http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_1344805.html
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Date: 2005-04-05 12:06 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-05 10:16 am (UTC)The scary thing with Birmingham, of course, is it wasn't a part of the all-postal 'experiment' and given that bribery of postal workers was also a part of these cases it makes one seriously worry about how bad those areas might have been ...
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Date: 2005-04-05 10:42 am (UTC)I can't believe that the idea of a secret ballot has evaporated, and not even the LibDems are arguing for its return!
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Date: 2005-04-05 10:59 am (UTC)Soph
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Date: 2005-04-05 11:04 am (UTC)The reason is straight-forwardly to prevent fraud as - on application to a court after the end of the ballot - a check can be made to see who actually voted. The Birmingham case would have relied on this. About four weeks after the election - if there are no appeals - the slips are destroyed and never checked against the lists. Even when they are used it is usually to check the voter's numbers rather than for whom they voted (one reason why the ballot number and official mark are on the opposite side)
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Date: 2005-04-05 11:17 am (UTC)Over in Ireland, where they use broadly similar voting methods to us, I understand they abolished the numbers because of concerns over this very issue.
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Date: 2005-04-05 11:33 am (UTC)second bit: ah yes, the country that invented "Vote Early, Vote Often" ;-P
actually, ireland has it right in respect of carrying a ballot box around to the elderly, etc. so that they can still cast their ballot in person rather than trust the mail ...
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Date: 2005-04-05 02:50 pm (UTC)It was done to help convict a Tory owner of an old people's home who got proxy votes for some of hir residents without bothering to ask them about it though.
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Date: 2005-04-05 11:00 am (UTC)We are also still for bringing in electoral reform asap too ...
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Date: 2005-04-05 11:14 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-05 11:43 am (UTC)seriously though, many people are bored by and anti the whole "democracy" thing and think it makes no difference (even though it eriously does). Arguably, it is local elections not national elections that make most difference to us as individuals, but that gets even fewer people motivated.
I've had a permanent postal vote for nearly 16 years, originally because of work taking me away from home at short notice. To my mind, "I can't be bothered to go to the polling booth in my sub-ward" should not be a valid reason for a postal vote.
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Date: 2005-04-05 09:13 pm (UTC)I've lived in a different place for every general election in which I've been eligible to vote. On all occasions, the polling booth has been within half a mile (and in one case within a hundred yards), open well before it's time to go to work, and well after I've got home, and there have never been any significant queues.
It really is not difficult to vote.
My mind boggles that people can be so f*cking lazy, so f*cking ungrateful that they have the right to vote, and so f*cking selfish that they don't exercise the *duty* that goes with that right.
Arseholes, the lot of them.
J
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Date: 2005-04-05 10:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-05 03:03 pm (UTC)*boggle*