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Saturday, 29.06.2024
eGovernment Forschung seit 2001 | eGovernment Research since 2001
It is still too early to say whether e-voting helped increase the number of people taking part in Thursday's local elections in England. The Electoral Commission reports that local authorities testing all-postal pilot schemes saw turnout rise to an average of 50 percent compared to an average voter turnout of around 33 percent. But early indications show that electronic voting -- by telephone, text messaging, digital TV and the Net -- did not have the same impact on turnout as postal pilots, said the Electoral Commission on Friday.

A report into Thursday's e-voting trial is expected to be published in July. No doubt it will contain a sizeable explanation concerning the goings-on in St Albans.

For although more people voted in the local elections in St Albans compared to last year, there were red faces all round after the technology on trial went on the blink. The local election vote was thrown into confusion with the St Albans Observer reporting that things got so bad it almost led to the vote being declared null and void.

The problem centred on the Presiding Officers' PCs, which are designed to check the electoral roll as voters entered the polling station. Some of the PCs in the voting booths -- which gave punters the chance to vote on-line -- also suffered hiccups. As a result, voters were forced to resort to traditional methods of voting -- a piece of paper and a crayon.

BT -- the outfit behind the St Albans trial -- said the computers which "experienced faults" were "installed by one of the contractors employed by BT to deliver technology and services to the local authorities." Normal service was resumed at around 5pm Thursday afternoon. The local council on Friday confirmed that turnout in St Albans was up 5 percent to 43 percent compared to last year.

According to research published recently by the Electoral Commission, half of adults reckon technology could make the difference to them voting or not.

Quelle: electricnews

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