Categories
voting

The Truth Is Out! Postal Voting, Trust and Fraud

“The [electoral] system is wide open to fraud and any would-be political fraudster knows that.”

So said Judge Richard Mawrey as he quashed the results of two local council elections in Birmingham.

The trial has finally raised the lid on the dirty secret that the political elite have long known about: Postal voting is a mess and is open to massive abuse. It's a terrible shame we had to get to a trial before the problems could be properly raised. The media coverage from this case will dramatically undermine the faith voters have in our electoral system, potentially reducing turnout – the exact opposite of the intended effects postal voting was supposed to have.

As I say, the elite knew about the problems, and many voters instictively felt that postal voting wasn't quite right. For example Birmingham's Labour leader wrote to Blair:

“At present, in relation to the handling of postal ballot papers, the law is so general that almost anything is legal.”

Furthermore the judge totally smashed the image of the Returning Officer as the key person responsible for ensuring a proper and accurate election. On Returning Officers Judge Mawrey said:

“If something seems wrong with the postal ballot papers, you have no powers or resources to ferret around to see if the votes are legitimate.”

The simple fact is that no matter what techniques are used (hand delivery, pin codes, better electoral rolls) any form of postal voting eliminates the secret ballot. Thus voters can be coerced or sell their votes and we immediately see why the secret ballot is so important. Postal voting inevitably risks an election's integrity.

I've long had doubts over postal voting, and these were confirmed when I assessed the 2003 All Postal Ballot Pilot in Brighton & Hove which seriously lacked transparency and threatened citizens' ability to vote through lost or stolen ballots.

Despite many knowing of the problems, the Government has pressed onwards with electoral experiments. We even saw a committee of MPs calling to make postal voting easier. The cynical view is that Labour tends to do better with higher turnouts so tricks like postal ballots were popular. The less cynical view is that it's easier to play with e-voting, supermarket polling booths and so on than really changing how one does politics. A few small voices of protest have tried to stem the tide but to little success and meanwhile the Electoral Commission were saying odd things. This changed when the Electoral Commission came out with a major report on all postal ballots after the troubled experiments for the Euro elections. As a result of this report in 2004 the Commission bravely went into their first ever open conflict with the Government over the use of all postal in the regional assembly referenda.

The Comission didn't just want to stop all postal for the referenda but actually said that:

“All-postal voting should no longer be pursued for use at UK elections.”

Jolly good stuff I felt… The juggernaut of postal voting was finally beginning to slow. The Commission felt that despite most reported problems not being significant (a claim which I feel they couldn't justify) the negative impact on voter's confidence was enough to stop any further pilots. Additionally the Commission published guidance on how to handle postal ballots if canvassing, yet is seems the parties are happily ignoring this basic fig-leaf covering the entire system's flaws.

How this ends we cannot know. By the end of the election I forsee many challenged results in marginal constituencies.

What the media says

The Times has taken significant interest in this issue, shame on some of the other papers for failing to see its fundamental importance to the UK's survival as a serious and trusted democracy. A Times leader “Votes and Values” sets the tone well. The Daily Mail also has an excellent leader column, though I think it's a bit much to implicate the national Labour government in the local Labour political fraud.

The Telegraph asked why it's taken so long for a tightening of the electoral legislation to be drafted… well it hasn't actually been drafted yet and won't be until after the election. It's a good question which The Times also asked.

In summary

Alarm bells should be ringing with the news that:

  • Six Labour councillors were found guilty of electoral fraud in Birmingham. BBC
  • A further 1,000 uncounted votes have just shown up in Birmingham. Guardian
  • A Labour councillor was found guilty of vote rigging in Blackburn. BBC
  • Increases of nearly 500% have been seen in postal vote applications in some areas with marginal constituencies. BBC
  • Apparently the Government is already preparing for the next round of e-voting with invites going out to suppliers. Silicon.com

This could be a disaster. I sincerely hope not.

Categories
notes from JK

Link Catchup

After a trip to Poland, death of the Pope and a stag night it's time to get back in the blogging saddle.

First things first, some interesting links that have been hanging around on my desktop for far too long.

  • The unceasingly excellent Phil Gyford has a great post on Boing Boing credibility and the challenges of the grey areas between amateur, semi-pro and pro in the blog world. Link
  • Over at 43 Folders there's a post that any technology consultant will sing 'Amen' to. Check out The Project Triangle

I have a huge postal vote post brewing… every time I get ready to finish it off more happens.

The General Election is pretty boring so far… and this is a junkie speaking. Still we did have the amusing doctored photo incident. This was an astonishingly stupid move by the Conservative candidate.

UPDATE: One more link I forgot to mention. Bruce Schneier's excellent analysis of the rules for electing a new Pope. Better than postal voting by a long way!

Categories
current affairs

Jan Pawel II RIP

Jan Pawel II

A river of tears pours from Poland today… From Lublin, Poland where I am tonight Rest in Peace Karol.

BBC Report

Categories
technology

Mac the fish

When I spent all of my time at university pestering my mate Paul about how brill Macs were I had absolutely no idea it would drive him to this….

Categories
technology

And so begins the Google backlash…

Ben Hammersley uses a piece in The Guardian to kick off the end of the media's love-in with Google. Have Google done anything wrong? No. On the other hand Yahoo! have certainly turned things around quite dramatically and compared to MSN's continuously dismal efforts they seem to be getting value for money with their investments in search.

There is a sense of inevitability to this Google backlash. Having ridden the hype curve Google had to come down. Yahoo! have been there, done that and now they are quietly delivering… rather well it seems.

What is important to note is that from everything I can see Yahoo! and Google are fundamentally different companies. Ignoring the search, context-sensitive advertising and two Os in their name and what do I see? Google is focussed on providing simple, easy, powerful access to other people's data. Yahoo! is still hell bent on producing and delivering content. As we read all those years ago, Yahoo! really do want to be a media company. Google is a tech company through and through.

So why is Yahoo! piling dollars into better search? Without a decent search it can't keep drawing consumers in front of its content, adverts and dating services. Google, relax – let Yahoo! do their thing we still love you.

UPDATE: Google fights back with Google Gulp!

UPDATE 2: John Naughton doubts Hammersley's logic…

Categories
voting

Suspect UK e-voting survey

I suppose beggars can't be choosers when a survey is reported as Brits voice fraud fears over high-tech voting but still I can't help but be suspicious when the results report that 51% of 'younger people' would vote if there was a dedicated website. What?

UPDATE: More coverage on Silicon.com

In other news the Electoral Commission have published their new code of conduct for candidates, canvassers and campaigners handling postal ballots. It's a long overdue process of stating the obvious but I'm afraid it's inevitably little more than a sticking plaster to the fundamental problems of postal voting.

Categories
technology

Long Tail TV

In exactly the same vein of a column I recently completed for LinuxUser, Wired magazine's editor Chris Anderson has put together an excellent post on why the TV business is in for a big change. Let's face it, the more we get used to downloading music etc the more not being able to watch video content when we want is going to grate. The technology (BitTorrent) is here – gimme gimme gimme!

Categories
current affairs

The Government Inspector

Just finished watching Channel 4's The Government Inspector which certainly left Gilligan, Campbell and Kelly all looking rather bad. Some answers were hinted at but many still seemed beyond the reach of the film-maker's apparently detailed research.

I couldn't help feeling as the film ended that I hadn't been given enough to explain why a man like Kelly would kill himself, if indeed he did. A number of family problems were alluded to but not detailed – perhaps that is where the missing pieces of the puzzle lie?

Categories
e-democ / e-gov

Richard Allan on the anti-terror bill

If you're not aware of it already, LibDem MP Richard Allan's blog is offering wonderful insights into what it's like to be inside the never ending votes on the government's ill-fated anti-terror bill. Add to your feed-readers today!

Categories
technology

Google News Customisation

Google News now how sports some interesting customisation features built in Dynamic HTML. Not only can you rearrange where blocks of news appear on your page but you can also add your own keyword driven news sections. Very interesting… It's My Yahoo all over again, but not, if you know what I mean!