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European elections - Is it REALLY a secret ballot?



8ace

Banned
Jul 21, 2003
23,811
Brighton
I drew a picture of a jizzing cock on my ballot paper and wrote **** on it a few times. :moo:
Is that spoilt ???
 




My concern, in the interests of fair democracy, (I'm not a UKIP voter), is that some people, particularly older folk, may have been less aware.
Some of us are old enough to have voted in the days when only the names of candidates were printed on the ballot papers - with no mention of the political party that they were representing.
 


fataddick

Well-known member
Feb 6, 2004
1,602
The seaside.
To answer the original post: The UK is the only country in Europe that doesn't have secret ballots. In all elections in the UK (local, general, Euro, etc) the number on your ballot paper is registered against your name so your vote is easily traceable. Only Singapore, the Philippines and Nigeria also number ballot papers in this way. Other countries (eg Malaysia, Pakistan) used to, but stopped after complaints. Western World wise, only in the UK - the world capital of CCTV - do we put up with this sort of invasion of privacy shit...
 


GreersElbow

New member
Jan 5, 2012
4,870
A Northern Outpost
It's a conspiracy. The lizards at the top of the European Commission ordered their lizard counterparts in each constituent member state, those states will then hunt down the anti-federalist anti-lizard establishment and drain them of their blood in which they bath in and celebrate at the Bohemian Grove.

If you think I'm wrong, prove me wrong. You're just ignorant of fact.

I drew a picture of a jizzing cock on my ballot paper and wrote **** on it a few times. :moo:
Is that spoilt ???

No, it'll just be counted as a 'UKIP' count.

Similarly, I accidentally voted for the Judean People's Front instead of the People's Front of Judea.

SPLITTER!
 


To answer the original post: The UK is the only country in Europe that doesn't have secret ballots. In all elections in the UK (local, general, Euro, etc) the number on your ballot paper is registered against your name so your vote is easily traceable. Only Singapore, the Philippines and Nigeria also number ballot papers in this way. Other countries (eg Malaysia, Pakistan) used to, but stopped after complaints. Western World wise, only in the UK - the world capital of CCTV - do we put up with this sort of invasion of privacy shit...
As part of my sociological study of a community in Italy (back in the seventies), I took a particular interest in voting patterns at a local level. There was one village near where I lived where the Italian Communist Party managed to attract the votes of 103 per cent of the electorate. The fact that votes were untraceable meant that it was impossible to investigate whatever dodgy electoral practice was going on.
 












Barrel of Fun

Abort, retry, fail
There was a party on the top which could have fooled UKIP voters. It's description was very similar:

An Independence From Europe (Title of party)
Uk Independence now

I saw that and assumee they were the UKIP before finding them near the bottom. I wonder how many votes they picked up from over keen xenophodes.
 










jackanada

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2011
3,186
Brighton
Our lovely intelligence services definitely used to take the communist ballot papers after counting was over and the result declared. Got to have the names of all those reds under the bed.
No reason to think similar dubious practices don't take place now.
 


Petunia

Living the dream
NSC Patron
May 8, 2013
2,270
Downunder
Official UKIP got a spikey pube from me whilst the foolsters got one of the drops of jizz.

I'll have a sly chuckle if I come across that one on Sunday (no pun intended):eek:
 




8ace

Banned
Jul 21, 2003
23,811
Brighton
Have people not noticed how the party you've voted for previously sends you leaflets with your name on ???
 


Kin el, back when god was a boy it used to be next day, thought by now it would have been early hours of the morning.
European elections have always been different. The UK and the Netherlands vote on a Thursday, other countries vote later (up until Sunday). No results are declared until after everyone has stopped voting.

I remember the 1994 European Parliament election when, between the vote and the results, I went to Horsham to watch Sussex play a Sunday League cricket match. Who should I bump into at the game, but one of the candidates ... that nice David Bellotti. This was, of course, before he'd been rumbled as a man presiding over the intended death of the Albion. I've often wondered how things might have turned out differently, if he'd won a seat at Strasbourg in that election.
 


Have people not noticed how the party you've voted for previously sends you leaflets with your name on ???
You mean you've voted for a party that has picked up a copy of the electoral register? As a former candidate in council elections, I can report that the Returning Officer gives these documents to any candidate who asks for one. It's an easy task to address leaflets personally to every elector, particularly since the register now comes in both a paper and an electronic form.
 


8ace

Banned
Jul 21, 2003
23,811
Brighton
You mean you've voted for a party that has picked up a copy of the electoral register? As a former candidate in council elections, I can report that the Returning Officer gives these documents to any candidate who asks for one. It's an easy task to address leaflets personally to every elector, particularly since the register now comes in both a paper and an electronic form.

But I don't get leaflets for the parties I've never voted for though - whilst others do ???
 




If anyone is interested, there were Council elections in Hastings today. In most wards, UKIP didn't even bother to put up a candidate. So much for their claim to be a serious political party.
 


pastafarian

Well-known member
Sep 4, 2011
11,902
Sussex
Have people not noticed how the party you've voted for previously sends you leaflets with your name on ???

oddly enough was round at a mates election night 2001.There was a knock at the door and a Labour activist asked my mates wife if she had voted yet this year and would she be voting Labour again.
She was most shocked to find out he knew how she voted last time but not half as shocked as my Tory mate,(choking on his dinner) who considered it worthy of an act of divorce.
 


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