Application to initiate a monitoring procedure to investigate electoral fraud in the United Kingdom
Opinion for the Bureau of the Assembly
Addendum to the report
| Doc. 11565 Add. II
| 14 April 2008
1 Decision
1. On 28 June 2006, Mr Wilshire
and others tabled, through a motion for a resolution, an application
to initiate a monitoring procedure to investigate electoral fraud
in the United Kingdom (
Doc. 10993 (2006)). In their application, the authors allege that
the growing body of evidence that absent voting fraud is taking
place in the United Kingdom, would warrant the initiation of a monitoring
procedure by the Assembly.
2. In conformity with the Rules of Procedure of the Assembly,
and in particular
Resolution
1115 (1997) as amended by
Resolution
1431 (2005), this motion was referred for opinion to the Monitoring
Committee by the Bureau on 2 October 2006. The Monitoring Committee,
at its meeting on 16 October 2006, then appointed Ms Herta Däubler-Gmelin
(Germany, SOC) and Ms Ursula Gacek (Poland, EPP/CD) as co-rapporteurs
for the United Kingdom and authorised them to carry out a fact finding
visit to the country, which took place from 26 to 28 February 2007.
3. From the findings of the rapporteurs, it is clear that the
electoral system in Great Britain is open to electoral fraud. This
vulnerability is mainly the result of the, rather arcane, system
of voter registration without personal identifiers. It was exacerbated
by the introduction of postal voting on demand, especially under
the arrangements as existed before the changes in the Electoral
Code in 2006. The 2006 changes to the Electoral Code enhanced the
security of the postal voting arrangements, but other shortcomings
and vulnerabilities remain. Together with numerous British experts
we strongly recommend to eliminate those.
4. Despite the vulnerabilities in the electoral system, there
is no doubt that elections in the United Kingdom are conducted democratically
and represent the free expression of the will of the people of the
United Kingdom. On these grounds, it cannot be argued that the United
Kingdom has fallen short on honouring its democratic commitments
to the Council of Europe and we can therefore not recommend opening
a monitoring procedure.
5. It should be stressed, however, that the United Kingdom delivers
democratic elections despite the vulnerabilities in its electoral
system. These vulnerabilities could easily affect the overall democratic
nature of future elections in Great Britain. The Monitoring Committee
should, in its periodic reports on the honouring of commitments
by member states, pay special attention to electoral issues in the
United Kingdom and, if the vulnerabilities noted are found to undermine
the overall democratic nature of future elections in Great Britain, apply
to initiate a monitoring procedure with respect to the United Kingdom.
2 Introduction
1. On 28 June 2006, Mr Wilshire
and others tabled, through a motion for a resolution, an application
to initiate a monitoring procedure to investigate electoral fraud
in the United Kingdom (
Doc. 10993 (2006)). In their application the authors allege that
the growing body of evidence that absent voting fraud is taking
place in the United Kingdom would warrant the initiation of a monitoring
procedure by the Assembly.
2. According to
Resolution
1115 (1997), as amended by
Resolution
1431 (2005), an application to initiate a monitoring procedure –
which may originate,
inter alia,
from a motion for resolution or recommendation tabled by not less
that 10 members of the Assembly, representing at least five national
delegations and two political groups – is to be considered by the
Monitoring Committee which, after the appointment of two co-rapporteurs and
after carrying out the necessary investigations, will prepare a
written opinion for the Bureau. This opinion should contain a draft
decision to open, or not to open, a monitoring procedure. If both
the Monitoring Committee and the Bureau of the Assembly agree to
open the monitoring procedure, or if they take divergent positions,
the written opinion adopted by the Monitoring Committee shall be
transformed into a report containing a draft resolution which will
be included for debate in the agenda and order of business of the
next Assembly part-session. If both the Monitoring Committee and
the Bureau of the Assembly agree that there is no need to open a
monitoring procedure, such decision shall be recorded in the progress
report of the Bureau and the Standing Committee, subject to confirmation
by a vote of the Assembly during the discussion of the progress
report.
3. Subsequently, at its meeting on 16 October 2006, the Monitoring
Committee appointed Ms Herta Däubler-Gmelin (Germany, SOC) and Ms Ursula
Gacek (Poland, EPP/CD) as co-rapporteurs for the United Kingdom
and authorised them to carry out a fact finding visit to the country.
4. The fact finding visit took place from 26 to 28 February 2007
and was organised in close co-operation with the national delegation
of the United Kingdom to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
of Europe. The rapporteurs wish to thank the national delegation
of the United Kingdom, and the British authorities, for their co-operation
and support extended to the rapporteurs in carrying out their task.
They also wish to thank the delegation for having provided them
with a detailed response at the end of May 2007 to supplementary questions
they had put in April 2007.
5. It should be noted that, although the motion for a resolution
calls for the opening of a monitoring procedure “to investigate
electoral fraud in the United Kingdom”,
Resolution 1115 (1997), as amended, does not allow for the opening of partial
monitoring procedures on specific issues for a given country. Consequently, if
the Assembly were to decide on the opening of a monitoring procedure
with respect to the United Kingdom, this would entail a fully fledged
monitoring procedure in respect of the honouring of obligations
by the United Kingdom as a member state of the Council of Europe.
For the rapporteurs this raises the threshold for their assessment:
they need to ascertain that electoral fraud, and the vulnerability
of the British electoral system to fraud and malpractice, would
warrant the opening of a fully fledged monitoring procedure.
3 Background
6. Postal voting has been part
of the British electoral system since 1918. However, before the
changes in the Representation of the People Act in 2000, postal
voting was limited to persons who could justify their reason for
not being able to vote in person at the polling station, either
due to absence from the country or for occupational, health or similar
reasons. However, concerned about the falling voter turnout, especially
in local and European elections, the government started looking
for mechanisms that would improve the voter turnout and make it
easier for people to vote. As a result, postal voting on demand
was introduced
Note with the changes to the
Representation of the People Act in 2000. Since the introduction
of postal voting on demand, it is no longer necessary to give a
valid reason for applying for a postal vote and the application
and voting procedures for postal voting were simplified. In addition,
it is now not only possible to apply for a postal vote for a specific election,
but also for a definite and even indefinite period of time.
7. In addition to introducing postal voting on demand, the changes
to the Representation of the People Act in 2000 also included provisions
that allow local authorities to pilot a range of electoral arrangements
to increase voter turnout at local and European elections, including
electronic voting and all postal elections.
8. As a result of the introduction of postal voting on demand,
the percentage of voters that voted by post increased significantly.
In the 2001 general elections nearly 4% of the voters were issued
with a postal vote. This was nearly a doubling of the figure for
the 1997 general elections. In the European Parliament elections in
2004 this figure rose to 8.9%
Note and
for the 2005 general elections to 12.1% of the electorate.
9. In 2003 and 2004, the Electoral Commission
Note issued
two reports that,
inter alia,
analysed the postal voting arrangements in the United Kingdom.
Note While
acknowledging that the postal voting on demand arrangements may
have positively affected the voter turnout, it also noted that the
large increase in postal voting could make the arrangements more
open for abuse. The Electoral Commission therefore recommended the
government to introduce a series of measures that would enhance
the security of postal voting.
10. In April 2005, a judgment was delivered in a case of electoral
fraud in two wards in Birmingham City Council, which stated that
the evidence of electoral fraud encountered would “disgrace a banana
republic”. This judgment did much to form the public perception
with regard to the vulnerability to fraud of the postal voting system,
and was a watershed as far as the public confidence in the electoral
system was concerned. The judgment is discussed in detail later
in the report.
11. Possibly also as a result of the heightened awareness after
the Birmingham judgment, several other cases of electoral fraud
were investigated by the police in 2005 and 2006, such as in Tower
Hamlet, Blackburn and Coventry. Although all these cases concern
electoral fraud during local elections, the rapporteurs were informed
by the Crown Prosecution Service that they are currently investigating
a case of electoral fraud committed during the parliamentary elections.
12. The exact scale of electoral fraud during elections in Great
Britain is subject to considerable political debate. On the one
side, the minister responsible for the Department for Constitutional
Affairs stated in March 2006 that “… everyone agrees that electoral
fraud is very rare”. On the other side, Sir Alistair Graham, Chairman
of the Committee on Standards in Public Life stated in February
2007 that “Electoral fraud is a real and potent threat to our society”.
This controversy is also compounded by the fact that no serious
research, either by the authorities or academics, has taken place
into this matter,
Note and that electoral fraud,
by nature, goes undetected if successful. However, there is no doubt
that electoral fraud occurred during elections in the United Kingdom,
Note and there is also no
doubt that the public perception of the safety of the postal voting arrangements
has suffered as a result of the cases of electoral fraud that recently
have come to light. Addressing the public perception regarding electoral
fraud and the resulting diminishing public confidence in the electoral
system is an important objective in itself. In this respect, it
should be noted that the public perception that fraud was endemic
in elections in Northern Ireland, was one of the main reasons for
the adoption of the Electoral Fraud Act (Northern Ireland) in 2002.
This act will be discussed in more detail later on in this report.
13. In response to the vulnerabilities encountered with respect
to the postal voting arrangements, and following recommendations
from, inter alia, the Electoral
Commission, the government adopted a series of measures to combat
electoral fraud and to enhance the safety of the postal voting arrangements.
These measures were adopted in 2006 and were in force during the
2007 local elections. However, the main recommendation by the Electoral
Commission, to change the voter registration system, was not implemented by
the authorities.
14. During the fact finding visit, it became clear to the rapporteurs
that one of the main underlying problems that affects the vulnerability
of the electoral system, and especially the postal voting arrangements,
is the voter registration system that is in use in Great Britain.
Taking into account the particularities of the voters’ registration
system, the Monitoring Committee, on recommendation of the rapporteurs,
decided in April 2007 to ask for an opinion of the European Commission
for Democracy through Law (Venice Commission) on the compatibility
of the registration system and postal voting arrangements with Council
of Europe standards.
15. In their meetings with the rapporteurs, government representatives
argued that the vulnerabilities of the postal voting arrangements
were satisfactorily addressed with the changes in the electoral
legislation in 2006. The rapporteurs therefore decided to wait with
the issuing of this report till after the local elections in 2007,
in order to assess the effect of the changes in the legislation.
4 The Birmingham case
16. In a judgment delivered on
4 April 2005, the elections in the Bordesley Green and Aston wards
of the Birmingham City Council were set aside as a result of widespread
electoral fraud, mostly involving postal voting. In his very comprehensive
judgment, Election Commissioner Richard Mawrey, QC, laid out in
succinct detail, not only the manner in which this fraud had been
committed, but also the vulnerability of the British electoral system
itself. His judgment received a fair deal of media attention, not
only because of the severity of fraud committed, but also, or especially,
as a result of his damning conclusions that “the evidence of electoral fraud
[...] would disgrace a banana republic” and that “…there are no
systems to deal realistically with fraud, and there never have been.
Until there are, fraud will continue unabated”.
Note As such, his judgment, and the media
attention it received, did to a large extent help shape the public
perception with regard to the vulnerability of the electoral system,
and especially the postal voting arrangements, in Great Britain.
17. The judgment of Richard Mawrey provides a good insight into
the vulnerabilities of the electoral system and in particular the
postal voting arrangements, in Great Britain. As a number of references
to the judgment are made in this report, we would like to summarise
this case in some detail.
18. Birmingham, the largest local authority in England and Wales,
is a metropolitan district with 120 city councillors which are elected
in 40 wards (election districts), three councillors for each ward.
In metropolitan districts city councillors retire in thirds, which
results in yearly elections for one seat in each ward.
Note In 2003, following an electoral
review, the number of wards in Birmingham was increased from 39
to 40 and the ward boundaries were redrawn. Therefore, in the 2004
local elections, all seats in the Birmingham City Council were up
for election. At a very late stage, the government announced that
the 2005 European Parliament elections would coincide with the local
elections. The combination of full city council and European elections
on the same day put considerable pressure on the election administration.
19. In Birmingham, approximately 33% of the population comes from
ethnic minority communities, and a large number of persons in these
communities do not speak English as their mother tongue. Before
2004, the Birmingham City Council was controlled by the Labour Party.
Labour’s control over the city council had become precarious, especially
as a result of the United Kingdom’s involvement in the Iraq war,
which was highly unpopular among the relatively large Muslim community
in Birmingham. It was therefore generally expected that the Labour
Party would have difficulties in maintaining its support in predominantly
Muslim wards.
Note
20. In 2001, when postal voting was introduced, approximately
7 000 postal votes were issued in Birmingham. This number rose considerably
in 2002 when approximately 20 000, and in 2003 when approximately
28 000, postal votes were requested. However, in 2004, and against
expectations, more that 70 000 postal vote applications were received
for the local elections in Birmingham, over 40 000 of which during the
last two weeks before the official deadline for applications on
2 June 2004. The increase in postal vote applications was not evenly
spread over the different wards. In the Bordesley Green and Aston
wards, where the election petitions were filed, the number of postal
vote applications rose by 900% and 1 000% respectively. This exponential
increase in postal vote applications overwhelmed the election administration
and legal procedures for the treatment of postal votes were not,
or only partially, adhered to. As mentioned in the judgment, the
pressure on the election administration would have been even greater
if the returning officer would have actually been charged with checking
the validity of postal votes and postal vote applications.
Note
21. The election administration, expecting some problems, took
a series of measures to counter the risk of personation
Note at the polling stations.
What they did not expect, however, was the large number of voters showing
up at the polling stations only to discover that they had been added
to the postal voters’ list and were therefore ineligible to vote
at the polling station.
22. When the results were announced, it appeared that the turnout
in the Bordesley Green ward had increased by more than 100% in comparison
to the 2003 elections and in the Aston ward by more than 350%! More
surprising was the fact that in both wards, which are predominantly
Muslim in make-up, the results showed a large swing of votes in
favour of the Labour candidates, despite the general discontent
with Labour’s involvement in the Iraq war. In addition, it turned
out that the number of postal votes cast had greatly exceeded the
number of votes cast in the polling stations in these wards.
Note These results seemed to confirm
expectations of opposition parties that the Labour candidates had
defrauded the elections in these wards and election petitions were
filed against their results.
23. In the case of the Bordesley Green ward, the election petition
alleged that the Labour candidates had obtained a large number of
blank ballot papers which they used to personate legitimate voters
and that the candidates had obtained and altered completed ballot
papers. In the case of the Aston ward, the election petition alleged
that the Labour candidates had obtained a large number of blank
ballot papers which they used to personate legitimate voters; that
the candidates had obtained and altered completed ballot papers;
that the candidates had been caught vote rigging and that there
had been instances of bribery and undue influence. In both petitions
it was also alleged that the returning officer had failed to properly
conduct the elections. Due to their similarities it was decided
to hear both cases simultaneously.
24. As a result of the evidence presented at the trial, the Election
Commissioner, Richard Mawrey, QC, judged it proven beyond doubt
that in Bordesley Green large-scale electoral fraud had been committed through:
falsified signatures on postal vote applications and declarations
of identity,
Note postal
votes that were cast in the name of voters who had not applied for
a postal vote; postal votes that had been cast in the name of voters
who had not received their postal ballot pack; altered ballot papers;
and theft of postal ballot packs.
25. While he could not give an exact figure for the fraudulent
ballots cast, based on the evidence before him the Election Commissioner
estimated that it could not have been less than 1 500 and probably
well over 2 000 votes, which would mean well over a third of the
votes cast for the Labour candidates.
Note Taking into account that the difference
in votes between the lowest vote for a Labour and highest vote for
an opposition candidate was less than 500, the Election Commissioner
considered it proven that the electoral fraud committed had changed
the outcome of the elections in the Bordesley Green ward, and this
election was subsequently declared void in respect of all three
seats.
26. In the Aston ward, police officers were directed to a warehouse
on the eve of the elections, after receiving a telephone call that
Labour councillors were rigging ballot papers there. When they arrived
at the warehouse, they found a number of persons, including the
three Labour candidates, in possession of a large number of opened
postal ballot packs. After initially believing the excuse given
for the presence of the ballot packs at the warehouse, the police
officers returned later to compound the ballot papers and other
election materials. Inexplicably, the completed ballot papers were
later handed over to an election officer who accepted them as valid
ballots. Based on other evidence given, Judge Mawrey considered
it proven that the Labour candidates at the warehouse were either
falsifying postal ballots and/or examining postal ballots with the
aim to alter or destroy those that were not cast in their favour.
27. In addition to the fraud encountered at the warehouse, it
was proven, on the basis of evidence provided by a court appointed
handwriting expert that a large number of declarations of identity
had been signed by the same persons and were thus falsified. On
a considerable number of them the handwriting was identified as belonging
to one of the Labour candidates who had witnessed the declarations
of identity using a number of different names. In addition, in a
significant number of cases the voter signature on the declaration
of identity did not match the signature on the corresponding postal
ballot application forms.
28. While he could not give an exact figure for the fraudulent
ballots cast, based on the evidence before him, the Election Commissioner
estimated that it could not have been less than 1 000 votes. Taking
into account that the number of votes between the last person elected
and the first person not elected – numbers three and four on the
list – was 514, the Election Commissioner considered it proven that
the electoral fraud committed had changed the outcome of the elections
in the Aston ward, and this election was subsequently declared void in
respect of all three seats.
Note
29. In both the Bordesley Green and Aston petitions, it was also
alleged that the returning officer had failed to properly conduct
the elections. For an election to be set aside as a result of a
returning officer failing to properly conduct the election, it must
be proven that the election in question was substantially not conducted according
to the law, and that this act changed the results of the elections.
In both cases, the Election Commissioner considered that, despite
breaches of the Electoral Code, the conduct of the election was
overall in line with legal provisions. In addition the breaches
of the law that took place, did not affect the outcome of these
elections. In both petitions the case against the returning officer
was therefore dismissed.
5 Voter registration
30. The United Kingdom uses an
active system of voter registration: voters need to register, or
to be registered, in order to be added to the voters’ list. The
responsibility for electoral registration in England and Wales lies
with the electoral registration officers appointed by each local
authority. In Scotland, electoral registration is the responsibility
of assessors employed by the joint valuation boards. In Northern
Ireland, the voters’ registers are centrally maintained by the chief
electoral officer.
Note In Great Britain, all
voters’ registers are maintained by local authorities and no central
national voters’ register exists.
31. The electoral lists are compiled on a yearly basis using a
system of household registration. Under this system, a yearly canvas
takes place for which each household is sent a canvassing form.
It is the responsibility of each head of a household to return this
form, with the names of each resident in his or her household who is
eligible, or considered eligible to vote, added.
32. The concept of a “household” seems to coincide with individual
registered residential properties. However, multi-occupancy households,
such as student dormitories and care homes for the elderly, are
also considered to be single households for the purpose of voter
registration.
33. The onus for the, correct, registration of the members of
a household is on the head of that household. While registration
itself is not compulsory, not returning the yearly canvas form,
or knowingly providing incorrect information on this form, is an
offence punishable with a fine of £1 000. However, to the knowledge
of your rapporteurs, this sanction is very rarely applied especially
in the case of not returning the yearly canvas form.
34. The electoral register contains only the names of the voters
and the address where they reside. No other information that could
help to correctly identify a person, so-called personal identifiers,
such as date of birth or signature, is recorded on the electoral
register.
35. Since 2001, it has been possible for a voter to register,
or amend their details, on an individual basis outside the yearly
canvas, which is called “rolling registration”. Voters’ registers
are updated on a monthly basis taking in information received from
the rolling registration process. Until the adoption of the Electoral Administration
Act in 2006, the deadline to register was some six weeks in advance
of an election. The Electoral Administration Act moved the deadline
for registration to eleven days before the close of the poll.
36. Till the adoption of the Electoral Administration Act 2006,
it was not an offence to provide false information on the rolling
registration form.
Note
37. Registration officers have only limited powers to check the
validity of the information provided on the household and rolling
registration forms and are under no statutory obligation to do so.
They have the power to inspect other records held by their local
authority and check any register of birth and deaths. However, they do
not have the authority to conduct checks outside their local authority.
In addition, the information available to them often pertains only
to the heads of households. Moreover, the absence of personal identifiers
on the voters’ lists makes the checking of the validity of the information
provided all but impossible. In practice, the information provided
on the registration forms is therefore generally accepted on face
value.
38. The difficulty of checking information is further complicated
by the fact that no civil registry exists in the United Kingdom,
either on the national, or local, level. In absence of a true civil
register, the voters’ lists in practice function as de facto civil
registers. Registration on the voters’ list is often necessary to
open a bank account, to obtain credit or to apply for social services.
39. The constituency boundaries are based on the number of registered
voters in order to ensure the principle of equal weight of each
vote.
40. In order to ensure that no voter will be disenfranchised due
to failure by a head of household to return the canvassing form,
a system of “carrying forward” is used. Under this system, entries
on the voters’ register are carried forward for one year, even if
no new registration information is received. While this may prevent
the accidental deregistration as a result of failure to return a
canvas form, it potentially allows for deceased persons, or persons
who moved to another local authority without informing the registration
officer, to be erroneously maintained on the voters’ register. In
addition, a number of interlocutors informed the rapporteurs that
in practice names on the register are carried forwards for more
than one year.
41. In this respect, it is important to note that registration
of the same person on multiple voters’ lists is not only possible,
but legally allowed. A voter is allowed to vote in the elections
for several local authorities as long as that voter has a legal
residence in those localities. However, it is illegal for a voter
to vote more than once in a national election.
42. The voters’ list is published for public inspection and made
available to political parties and candidates. In addition, an edited
version of the voters’ list is made available for sale to commercial
organisations. Voters have the possibility to opt out of the version
made available for sale, hence the name, edited register. However, under
household registration, they depend on the head of the household
to indicate the wish to opt out of the edited version, which may
be problematic in multi-occupancy households.
43. The law allows any citizen to file an objection to an entry
on the voters’ list they deem fraudulent or otherwise incorrect.
Election registration officers are obliged to investigate any objections
raised. However, as noted by the Electoral Commission: “Electoral
registration officers report that the current process for objections to
registration applications has become largely unworkable, particularly
since the introduction of monthly alterations as a result of rolling
registration applications. Few, if any, objections to registration
are ever received.”
Note
6 Postal voting
44. With the introduction of postal
voting on demand, voters in Great Britain
Note no longer need a valid reason to
apply for a postal vote. In addition, voters can now apply for a
postal vote for a specific election, for a definite period of time,
and even for an indefinite period of time (a so-called permanent
postal vote).
45. In order to obtain a postal vote, a voter must apply to be
added to the absent voters’ list. This list contains two sub-sections,
one for proxy, and one for postal voters. In the application the
applicant must give the following obligatory information: full name,
the address where the applicant is registered, the address where the
postal vote should be sent to, and a statement whether the application
is for a specific election, a definite period of time, or an indefinite
period of time. In addition, since the 2006 changes in the electoral
legislation, an applicant must now provide a date of birth, a signature,
Note as
well as a reason for the postal ballot to be redirected to another
address than where the applicant is registered on the voters’ list.
46. While an official form to apply for an absent vote exists,
there is no obligation for an applicant to use this form. An application
can be made in any format as long as it contains the required information
mentioned above. In addition, the law does not specify how the application
should be returned to the registration officer. It is common practice
for parties and candidates to devise their own application forms
and to collect the completed forms for delivery to the registration
officer.
47. While a reason must be given for redirection of the postal
vote to another address than where the applicant is registered,
the law does not specify what a valid reason for redirection would
be. A justification such as “because it is more convenient for me”
seems therefore to be a perfectly valid reason for redirection of
a postal vote. In practice, registration officers will have to accept
any request for redirection of a postal vote as long as any form
of, not overly frivolous,
Note justification
is given. The usefulness of this provision as a mechanism to counter
electoral fraud is therefore highly questionable.
48. The application for a postal vote needs to be signed by the
voter and a date of birth should be given. However, as already mentioned,
no signature or date of birth are required for, or recorded on,
the voters’ list. Without the possibility to compare the signature
and date of birth on the application with a signature and date of
birth on the voters’ register, this information cannot be used to
provide positive verification of the identity of the applicant.
However, the signature and date of birth can be used during an election
to check that the postal ballot was returned by the same person
that made the application for the postal ballot.
49. It should be noted that until the adoption of the 2006 Electoral
Administration Act, it was not an electoral offence to falsely apply
for a postal vote.
Note However, it was already an offence
to fraudulently cast a vote on someone else’s behalf.
50. The Electoral Administration Act of 2006 moved the deadline
for applying for a postal vote back from five to eleven days before
the date of an election. The original deadline of five days had
proven to be problematically short for the election administration
to check the validity of a postal vote application, mail the postal
ballot pack to the voter and allow sufficient time for the voter
to return the ballot, especially if a large number of applications
were received close to the deadline.
Note
51. Mostly as a measure to counter fraudulent applications, an
acknowledgement of receipt of the application, as well as a written
confirmation of all decisions on the application, is sent to the
voter at the address where the voter is registered in the voters’
list. Until 2006 this was done “where practicable”, but following
recommendations of the Electoral Commission this was made mandatory
with the 2006 amendments to the Representation of the People (England
and Wales) Regulations.
52. Voters who have requested a postal ballot or proxy vote are
entered on the absent voters’ lists which are available to the registered
candidates for an election.
53. Each voter who applied for a postal vote will receive before
election day a postal ballot pack consisting of the ballot paper,
an envelop for the ballot paper, a security statement and a freepost
envelope to return the ballot and security statement to the returning
officer. These ballot packs are dispatched by normal mail in clearly
marked envelops. It was mentioned in the judgment in the Birmingham
case that the fact that the ballot packs are clearly marked as such
may have facilitated their theft.
54. The completed ballot and accompanying security statement need
to be returned to the returning officer before the closing of the
polls on election day. However, the law does not specify how this
ballot has to be returned to the returning officer. It is therefore
perfectly legal, and indeed customary, for party and candidate representatives
to collect the completed ballot packs in order to return them to
the returning officer. Although it is illegal to handle the ballot
papers before they are sealed in the ballot envelop, the fact that
completed ballot packs can be legally handled by persons who do
not have an official reason to do so, seriously undermines the principle
of the secrecy of the vote.
55. The handling of completed ballot packs by persons who have
no statutory reason to do so is all the more of concern due to the
rules governing the validity of a cast ballot, which are drawn widely
to avoid mistakenly disenfranchising voters. As long as the ballot
does not contain any writing or marks that can identify a voter, the
ballot will be valid as long as the will of the voter can be detected.
More controversially, this means that any altered ballot will be
accepted by the returning officer as long as it shows a clear vote
for a candidate and no more votes than the election permits.
Note
56. Upon receipt of the ballot packs, the ballot envelops are
opened and the security statements are examined by the election
commissions. In addition, with the 2006 changes in the election
legislation the election officials should now check at least 20%
of the security statements against the original application forms.
Specialised software has been developed to assist with the comparison
of the signatures on the security statement and application form.
The new verification requirements are time consuming and led to
considerable delays in the counting of the votes and the announcement
of the election results during the local and regional elections
in 2007.
57. All ballot papers in the United Kingdom have a serial number
which, upon issuing, is linked to the voter’s entry on the voters’
register. There are strict legal provisions for matching a ballot
to a voter after the ballot has been cast. In general this can only
be done by a court order, for example in the framework of an election petition,
to prove alleged electoral fraud.
Note The exception
to this is when a voter requests a replacement ballot (see below).
The serial number of the ballot is also printed on the ballot envelop
and on the security statement. After the checking of the security
statement, the serial number on the ballot envelop is compared against
the serial number on the security statement. If the serial numbers
match, the security statement is set aside and the ballot is taken
from the ballot envelop and entered into a ballot box. The ballot
boxes are then brought to the counting centres for the ballots to
be counted in conjunction with the normal ballot papers on election
day.
58. Before the 2006 changes to the electoral legislation, voters
who showed up in a polling station and found that a postal ballot
had been requested in their name, or voters who had otherwise not
received or lost their postal ballot, were prohibited from voting
and thus disenfranchised. The 2006 amendments to the Representation
of the People (England and Wales) Regulations now allow voters to
request a replacement postal ballot up to 5 p.m. on election day,
after they have given proof of their identity. The replacement ballot will
void the original postal ballot if cast. The original ballot can
be traced, if cast, with the help of the serial numbers on the ballot
paper.
Note
7 Northern Ireland
59. In order to overcome electoral
fraud, especially impersonation and similar abuses, which was widely perceived
to be widespread in Northern Ireland, the Electoral Fraud Act (Northern
Ireland) was adopted in 2002.
60. While it was generally perceived that electoral fraud was
a major problem in Northern Ireland,
Note and while
all sides of the political divide acknowledged the existence of
electoral fraud, it should be noted that there are no official statistics
to support these perceptions.
Note Only a limited number of election petitions,
and few, if any, successful prosecutions for electoral fraud were
recorded in Northern Ireland in the years before the legislation
was enacted. However, the government rightfully concluded that addressing
the perceptions of fraud is a valuable objective in its own right,
especially if it serves to maintain high public confidence in the
electoral process itself.
61. The 2002 Electoral Fraud (Northern Ireland) Act constituted
a significant change to the election legislation and election processes
in Northern Ireland. Inter alia,
it changed the system of voter registration in Northern Ireland,
introduced personal identifiers – and provided the electoral administration
with the means to check them –, changed the regulations for absent
voting and introduced new electoral offences in Northern Ireland.
62. The act abolished household registration and introduced a
system of individual registration in Northern Ireland. It is now
the individual responsibility, and legal requirement, for each citizen
over 18 years of age to complete an annual registration form. In
addition, the system of carrying forward, whereby entries on the
voters’ register are carried forward for one year if no new registration
information has been received, was abolished in Northern Ireland.
63. In order to be entered on the voters’ list a person needs
to provide the following personal identifiers in addition to their
name and address: signature, date of birth, national insurance number
(or a signed declaration that the person never had a national insurance
number) and details of any other addresses where the voter has applied
to be registered. In the event not all of this information is provided
on the registration form, or if the registration officer is not
satisfied by the information provided, the applicant will not be
entered in the voters’ register.
64. In order to verify the personal identifiers given, the act
empowered the chief electoral officer
Note to verify the
national insurance number with the Social Security Agency. In addition,
the Social Security Agency may also give any date of birth, gender,
address and other name pertaining to the national insurance number.
65. Since the adoption of the 2002 Electoral Fraud (Northern Ireland)
Act, a voter in Northern Ireland has to present a photo ID in order
to vote. Valid photographic identification in this respect is a
valid British or EU passport, a United Kingdom photographic driver’s
licence or a Translink Senior SmartPass.
Note Voters
who posses none of the aforementioned identity papers can request
a special electoral identity card which is provided free of charge.
66. Postal voting on demand was not introduced in Northern Ireland.
Voters in Northern Ireland still need to provide a valid reason
to obtain a postal vote. In addition, persons applying for an absent
vote (postal or proxy vote) need to provide their date of birth,
national insurance number and signature. These details are checked against
the information contained in the voters’ register.
67. The 2002 Electoral Fraud (Northern Ireland) Act made it an
offence to knowingly provide false information on an election registration
form and allows presiding officers in a polling station to ask a
third statutory question:
Note “What
is your date of birth?”. The answer to this question is then checked
against the information contained in the voters’ register.
68. As a result of the introduction of the individual voter registration
system, the number of persons on the voters’ list dropped by approximately
120 000, or around 10%, in relation to the last voters’ list compiled
under the household registration system. There was therefore concern
that a large number of voters had been disenfranchised as a result
of the introduction of the individual registration system. However,
although acknowledging that a number of eligible voters may have
been dropped from the voters’ list,
Note the
Electoral Commission, in its assessment of the impact of the 2002
Electoral Fraud (Northern Ireland) Act,
Note concluded that the abolition
of the carrying forward principle and the removal of other inflationary
factors had resulted in far more accurate voters’ register in Northern
Ireland. In addition to the abolition of the carrying forward, the removal
of multiple registrations, former residents and potentially fraudulent
entries may have contributed significantly to the drop in registered
voters.
69. As a result of the initial drop in registration, the government
enacted the Electoral Registration Act 2005 which, as a one time
measure, ordered the reinsertion of names removed as a result of
the introduction of the individual voter registration system. However,
in order to be able to vote personal identifiers still need to be recorded
in the voters’ register. Citizens who did not provide this information
before the deadline set in the act, were removed from the voters’
register in conformity with the general provisions in the Registration
Act.
Note In addition, the Northern Ireland (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2006 replaced the annual canvas with a system of
continuous registration, supplemented by a canvass organised every
ten years or as deemed necessary by the chief electoral officer.
70. In the absence of official statistical data on electoral fraud
in Northern Ireland before and after the adoption of the 2002 Electoral
Fraud (Northern Ireland Act), it is impossible to assess the impact
of the act on electoral fraud in Northern Ireland. However, public
opinion research
Note shows
that in the public perception the adoption of the act contributed
to a reduction in electoral fraud in Northern Ireland and significantly
improved public confidence in the electoral system.
8 2006 changes to the Electoral
Code
71. In 2006, the Electoral Administration
Act and several amendments to Representation of the People (England
and Wales) Regulations were adopted. The new legislation contains
several provisions that aim to address some of the vulnerabilities
and shortcomings in the electoral process that became apparent after
the introduction of postal voting on demand.
72. The amendments to the Representation of the People (England
and Wales) Regulations, inter alia, moved
the deadline for the application for a postal vote from six to eleven
days before polling day and made it mandatory for the registration
officers to confirm in writing, to the registered address of the
voter, the receipt of an application for a postal vote, as well
as all decisions that are made regarding this application. In addition, the
amendments make replacement postal ballot papers available, on proof
of identity, up to 5 p.m. on election day, to those voters who claim
either not to have applied for a postal vote, but who are on the
absent voters’ list, or for voters who claim not to have received
their postal ballot. Furthermore, the amended regulations now require
that voters give a reason to have their postal vote redirected to
another address than the one on which they are registered in the
voters’ list.
73. The Electoral Administration Act,
inter
alia, made it an offence to falsely apply for a postal
vote or to knowingly provide false information on a rolling registration
form, and introduced provisions that require voters to provide personal
identifiers, in the form of a signature and date of birth, on both
the application for an postal vote
Note and the
security statement that accompanies the postal ballot. The law makes
it mandatory for returning officers to check the personal identifiers
on at least 20% of the returned security statements against the corresponding
application for a postal vote. In addition, the act moved the deadline
for voter registration for all elections to eleven days before the
closing of the poll and requires that voters sign the voters’ register
upon receipt of a ballot in the polling station.
Note
74. However, most notable is what was not included in the changes
to the electoral legislation. Despite explicit recommendations from
many experts, including the Electoral Commission and the Commission
on Standards in Public Life, the government decided not to introduce
a system of individual registration with personal identifiers, and
decided to maintain the system of carrying forward names on the
voters’ list for one year if no new registration information has
been given.
9 Election petitions
75. Elections may be challenged
by the losing candidate or four electors of the constituency (ward)
in an election petition. An election can only be challenged in an
election petition on the grounds of undue election, undue return
or on the ground that the person whose election is questioned was
disqualified at the time of election.
76. An election can be set aside via an election petition on grounds
of undue election, when it is proven that corrupt or illegal practices
on behalf of any candidate (whether elected or not) have so extensively
prevailed that it can be reasonably supposed that they have affected
the result of the election. An election can also be set aside on
grounds of undue return, if any acts or omissions of the returning
officer, or any person with official duties in relation to the election,
resulted in the election to be conducted in a manner that was substantially
not according to the law and that these acts or omissions affected
the results of the election.
Note
77. It is important to note that it is not only necessary to prove
that electoral fraud was committed or that the elections were substantially
not conducted according to the law, but also that this affected
the outcome of the election. The latter considerably raises the
bar for filing an election petition.
78. If an election petition is successful, the challenged election
is set aside and the candidate who committed the corrupt or illegal
practices, or whose agents committed them, is deprived of his vote
and cannot stand for any elective office for a period of five years
in the case of corrupt, and for three years in case of illegal, practices.
79. Election petitions are in effect a civil action which is governed
by civil procedure rules and the burden of proof is on the petitioner.
In addition, election petitions, as private legal actions, are potentially
costly for the petitioner. A fee of £180 is payable upon filing
of the petition, and security for the costs must be tendered. Election
petitions need to follow a prescribed legal form, as a result of
which legal assistance is normally needed to file a petition.
Note
80. As a result of the costs involved, the nature of an election
petition and the need to prove that the alleged electoral fraud
changed the outcome of an election, very few election petitions
are brought, and even fewer are brought to a successful conclusion.
As a result, the usefulness of election petitions as a means to
police electoral fraud was questioned by Judge Richard Mawrey in
his report to the High Court of Justice: “The election petition
is both inadequate and inappropriate as a method of controlling
fraud. For electoral probity to be policed by what are, in effect,
private civil law actions brought at the expense of the litigant,
cannot be acceptable.”
Note
81. Most forms of electoral fraud and abuse are criminal offences
under the Election Code as well as general criminal law. Any electoral
stakeholder or member of the public with strong suspicions that
electoral fraud is or has been committed can therefore file a complaint
with the police. Establishing proof of electoral fraud is difficult and
the police were reportedly initially reluctant and insufficiently
trained to investigate allegations of electoral fraud that were
brought to them. However, from their meetings with the police and
Crown Prosecution Service, the rapporteurs have the impression that,
as a result of the recent developments, the police are considering electoral
fraud as one of their priorities and that sufficient resources have
been set aside for investigating electoral fraud as well as for
the training of the police forces in this subject.
82. In this respect it should be noted that only an election petition
can set aside an election. A conviction of an election offence will
not void an election, although, if convicted him or herself, an
elected candidate will have to vacate his office.
83. A returning officer has no duty, and indeed no statutory power,
to investigate electoral offences.
10 Vulnerability of the registration
and postal voting on demand system in the United Kingdom
84. It does not take an experienced
election observer, or election fraudster, to see that the combination
of the household registration system without personal identifiers
and the postal vote on demand arrangements make the election system
in Great Britain very vulnerable to electoral fraud. The 2006 changes
to the electoral law only partially addressed this vulnerability.
85. The main underlying weakness of the electoral system in Great
Britain is the current household registration system without personal
identifiers. This system makes it extremely easy to add bogus characters to
the voters’ lists.
Note All a head of household
has to do is to add a number of names on the yearly canvas form. The
registration officers have only limited power to check these names
and the absence of personal identifiers makes any checking of these
names an all but impossible task. Therefore, as long as the names
on the registration form are not overly frivolous,
Note and
the number of bogus entries is not unrealistically large in comparison
to the residency in question,
Note all
names will be de facto accepted on face value and added to the voters’
list.
86. The absence of a civil register at local or national level
not only hinders the checking of applications for the voters’ register,
it actually provides an incentive for fraudulent applications. As
mentioned before, the voters’ register functions as a de facto civil
registry. Registration on the voters’ lists is often necessary to
open a bank account, to obtain credit or to apply for social services.
Therefore, bogus registrations may be made to facilitate other fraudulent
activities such as credit card and social security fraud, and may
be the start of the creation of a false identity. While the underlying
reasons for such a false registration may not be to commit electoral
fraud, it is quite possible that they are used for voting, in order
to give more depth and credibility to these false identities.
87. Multiple voting inside polling stations itself is necessary
only possible on a limited scale. There is a considerable risk that
the polling station staff, or party and candidate witnesses, would
recognise that a person tried to cast more than one vote for an
election. However, the current arrangements for postal voting provide an
easy means, and the required anonymity, to do so on a large scale.
88. The requirement for a signature and date of birth on the postal
vote application and security statement does nothing to prevent
electoral fraud by means of bogus entries in the voters’ register.
All a potential fraudster has to do is to keep track of, and match,
the false signatures and dates of birth on both forms, in order
to successfully cast a ballot in the name of a bogus character.
However, these provisions will, to a large extent, prevent the use
of fraudulently obtained postal ballot papers of legitimate voters
who have applied for a postal vote.
89. It is recognised that it would require a considerable degree
of premeditation and organisation on behalf of a party or candidate
to change the outcome of an election in their favour by means of
bogus entries on the voters’ lists. However, this vulnerability,
and hence the opportunity, very much exists. Equally worrisome, electoral
fraud committed in this manner is very difficult to detect.
90. None of the 2006 changes in the Electoral Code addresses the
above-mentioned opportunity for electoral fraud by means of bogus
entries on the voters’ list.
91. The fact that a person is legally allowed to be registered
on the voters’ lists in more than one locality offers another opening
for electoral fraud. Although it is illegal to vote more than once
in the same national election, the onus on not doing so is completely
on the voter itself. While it would be physically difficult to vote in
person in multiple polling stations in different localities, the
postal vote arrangements make it childishly simple to do so, and
equally difficult to detect. It may be difficult to change the outcome
of an election in this manner, but it runs counter to the principle
of “one person – one vote”.
92. Before the adoption of the amendments to the Representation
of the People (England and Wales) Regulations in 2006, falsely applying
for a postal vote in the name of an otherwise legitimate voter provided
a wide avenue for electoral fraud, especially taking into consideration
the ease with which a postal vote can be redirected to another address.
A fraudulent application,
Note and request for redirection, of a
postal vote could not only be used to cast a fraudulent ballot in
someone else’s name, but could also be used to prevent a legitimate voter
from casting a ballot for another candidate. Before the changes
in the electoral legislation, a person in whose name a postal ballot
was falsely requested had no possibility to obtain a replacement
ballot and was effectively disenfranchised to vote. Moreover, only
via an election petition would it be possible to prevent the fraudulently
cast postal ballot from being counted.
93. The new provisions in the Electoral Code that allow a voter
to request a replacement ballot do prevent the disenfranchisement
of voters in the manner described above. In addition, the provisions
ensure that the fraudulent votes will be cancelled.
Note The
new provisions that make it mandatory for the registration officers
to confirm in writing, to the registered address of the voter, the
receipt of an application for a postal vote, will help a voter to
detect when a fraudulent request for a postal vote in their name
is being made.
Note
94. The above-mentioned provisions have to a large extent addressed
the vulnerability of electoral fraud by means of falsely applying
for a postal ballot in the name of a legitimate voter. However,
these measures are not completely failsafe and some concerns about
their implementation remain, especially if a large number of applications
for a postal vote are received at the very last moment as was the
case in Birmingham for the local elections in 2004. In this event,
it would seem that voters would have only very limited time to react
to a false application, or it could result in the confirmation and
postal ballot pack being mailed at the same time. In such case,
only a request for a replacement ballot, which the voter may very
well not be able to make, would prevent the fraudulent postal vote
from being cast.
95. It is important to note that most of the cases of electoral
fraud that have recently come to light, took place in areas with
large communities of people for whom English is not their mother
tongue, and who therefore may have limited understanding of formal
English. If only sent out in English, a significant number of people
in those communities may not understand the contents of the mandatory
written confirmation messages, therewith reducing the effectiveness
of those messages as a means to counter fraudulent applications
for a postal vote.
96. The provisions to obtain a replacement postal ballot, in combination
with the requirement for the provision and matching of personal
identifiers on postal vote applications and security statements,
have, to a large extent, also foreclosed the possibility of using
stolen uncompleted of postal ballot packs, as was the case during
the 2004 local elections in Birmingham.
97. The legal provisions that allow third persons, such as party
and candidate representatives to collect postal vote applications
open another possibility for electoral fraud and undue influence.
While the rapporteurs sympathise with efforts that encourage citizens
to vote, they would like to emphasise that the option of not wanting
to vote is also a democratic right. The hoarding of postal vote
applications by party and candidate activists could, even unwillingly,
be construed as social pressure by the voter, which, as such, is
a form of undue influence.
98. More problematic in relation to the vulnerability to electoral
fraud, is the legal possibility for third persons, such as party
and candidate representatives to collect complete postal ballots
in order to bring them to the returning officer. As mentioned, any
handling of completed ballot papers by persons who do not have an
official obligation to do so runs counter to the principle of the
secrecy of the vote. The possibility to obtain completed ballot
papers makes it childishly simple for any person to fraudulently
alter the vote, especially in the light of the surprisingly lax
rules governing altered ballot papers.
99. The legal provisions that allow an altered ballot paper to
be treated as valid as long as the ballot shows the clear intention
of the voter are an invitation to electoral fraud. Any alteration
should cause a ballot to be considered spoilt. The possibility that
a voter accidentally invalidates his vote is clearly outweighed
by the immense opportunity for abuse. As mentioned by Judge Richard
Mawrey in his report to the High Court of Justice: “If any alteration
on a ballot paper caused it to be treated as a “spoilt” ballot paper
and rejected, many of the Birmingham frauds would have been frustrated.”
Note
100. The possibility for undue influence, especially among vulnerable
groups in society, is always a serious risk with regard to postal
voting. However, this risk is inherent to any form of voting that
takes place outside the confinements of a polling station, and is
not unique to the United Kingdom.
11 The 2007 elections in Scotland
and Wales
101. On 3 May 2007 local government
elections were held in England and Scotland. In addition, on the
same date, elections to the Scottish Parliament and National Assembly
in Wales were organised. They were the first elections to be governed
by the election legislation as adopted in 2006. However, the requirement
for voters to sign the voters’ register upon receipt of a ballot
in the polling station was not introduced for these elections as the
law did not contain a sanction if someone refused to sign. In addition,
the government decided to delay till after these elections the implementation
in Scotland of the provisions for personal identifiers for absent
voting. The delays in implementation weakened, to an extent, the
anti-fraud measures contained in the 2006 legislation for these
elections.
102. These elections were overshadowed by the controversy over
spoilt ballot papers and the operation of the electronic counting
system during the Scottish Parliament elections. The Scottish Parliament
is elected according to a mixed electoral system. Voters vote for
regional members via a closed party lists system and for constituency
members via a first-past-the-post system. In addition, the local
authorities were elected for the first time via a, by all accounts
complicated, system of single transferable vote (STV), in which
voters rank the candidates in order of preference. In addition,
it was decided to combine the regional and constituency ballots on
the same ballot paper. As a result of the confusion resulting from
the use of different voting systems, as well as the use of a single
ballot paper for both constituency and regional members, the number
of spoilt ballot papers exceeded 140 000, implying the disenfranchisement
of a considerable part of the Scottish electorate.
103. In 2004, the Secretary of State for Scotland set up the Commission
on Boundary Differences and Voting Systems, also known as the Arbuthnott
Commission. The Commission’s task was to,
inter
alia, look at the impact of the use of different voting
systems for elections in Scotland. In its report, the Arbuthnott
Commission recommended that the elections for the Scottish Parliament
and local government elections should not be organised on the same
day. However, although recommending revisions, the Commission endorsed
both the mixed electoral system for the elections to the Scottish
Parliament, as well as the use of STV for the local government elections.
Note Moreover, the Electoral Commission
engaged the private firm Cragg Ross Dawson to conduct public opinion
research on the design of the ballot paper to be used at the elections
for the Scottish Parliament. In its report, Cragg, Ross and Dawson
concluded that there was an overall preference among the public
for a combined ballot paper. In addition, although concluding that
separate ballot papers would be less likely to give rise to mistakes,
no serious objections were found with regard to the use of a combined
ballot paper.
Note
104. The organisation of multiple elections on the same date is
not uncommon in Europe and, although not advisable, does not run
counter to Council of Europe standards. In addition, although one
can question the wisdom of using three different electoral systems,
especially if one of them is newly introduced and fairly complex,
mixed electoral systems are used by other Council of Europe member
states and do not preclude democratic elections. The problems encountered
during the Scottish elections, despite all efforts by the authorities,
seem to be mostly of technical nature, and not related to any vulnerability
as such, of the British electoral system. They are therefore not
of remit for this report. However, these problems do add to the
public perception that something is amiss with the British electoral
system, which is an important concern of the rapporteurs.
105. The preliminary data seem to indicate that the number of postal
votes requested for the 2007 elections fell considerably in relation
to previous elections.
Note In
Birmingham the total number of postal votes fell from 70 075 in
2004 to 48 135 in the 2007 elections. In the two wards that were
at the centre of the Birmingham electoral fraud case, the number
of postal votes fell by more than 80%. On the one hand this may
indicate that the problems with the postal voting during previous
elections were more serious that originally thought, on the other hand
this could be an indication that the 2006 changes to the Electoral
Code have had their intended effect. However, it was noted that,
in England and Wales, the counting procedures were very protracted
as a result of the new verification requirements for postal votes.
106. In its review of the local government elections in England
and Wales the Electoral Commission concluded that the 2006 changes
in the electoral legislation have considerably reduced both the
volume and scale of electoral malpractices in comparison with the
May 2006 elections.
Note While
several serious allegations regarding postal and proxy fraud were
still made to the police, they were not near the scale of those
in previous elections such as in Birmingham in 2004, Bradford in
2005 or Tower Hamlets in 2006. Equally important, the Electoral
Commission noted that the changes in legislation had served to increase
the public confidence in the integrity of the electoral process.
107. In addition to the changes in the election code, the Electoral
Commission also credited an increased and more pro-active role of
the police forces as one of the factors contributing to the lower
level of reported electoral malpractice.
108. After initial problems, mainly as a result of the short time
span between the adoption of the legislation and these elections,
the processes for collecting and matching the personal identifiers
on the postal vote applications and security statements worked generally
well and without problems. The majority of the registration officers
decided to check the personal identifiers on well over the mandatory
20%, in most cases 100%, of the postal ballots received. Initial
statistics show that on average 6% in Wales, and 4% in England, of
the postal ballots returned were rejected as a result of non-matching
personal identifiers. While a considerable part of these mismatches
may have been the result of errors in filling in the application
forms and security statements, this figure is still uncomfortably
high.
109. Regrettably, the report of the Electoral Commission noted
that several instances were brought to the attention of the authorities
where political party representatives failed to adhere to the Code
of Good Conduct for the handling of election materials by political
party and candidate representatives.
Note This underlines
the concerns of the rapporteurs with regard to this subject.
12 Council of Europe standards
and commitments
110. The United Kingdom has signed
and ratified Protocol No. 1 to the European Convention of Human Rights
(ECHR). Article 3 of Protocol No. 1 explicitly provides for the
right to free elections: “The High Contracting Parties undertake
to hold free elections at regular intervals by secret ballot, under
conditions that ensure the free expression of the opinion of the
people in the choice of the legislature.”
111. In addition, the United Kingdom signed and ratified the European
Charter of Local Self-Government, by which it extended the principle
of free elections by secret ballot on the basis of direct, equal
and universal suffrage to local authority assemblies in Great Britain.
Note
112. As stated by the Code of Good Practice in Electoral Matters
Note of the Venice Commission of the
Council of Europe, the key principles underlying democratic elections
are universal, equal, free, secret and direct suffrage at regular
intervals. Full adherence to these principles is what lends elections
their democratic status. Within the respect for these principles
each country is free to choose its own electoral system that best
fits its sociocultural, historical and practical reality.
113. Following a recommendation of the rapporteurs, the Monitoring
Committee, at its meeting on 18 April 2007, decided to ask the Venice
Commission’s opinion on the following three questions:
114. Is the voters’ registration system in the United Kingdom in
line with Council of Europe standards, given in particular the household
registration as opposed to individual registration and the relative
lack of personal identifiers upon registration?
115. Is the manner in which postal voting is implemented in line
with Council of Europe standards, especially with regards to the
security of the vote?
116. Is the fact that different requirements are used for one part
of the country (Northern Ireland) with regard to voter registration
and postal voting for the same elections, in line with Council of
Europe standards?
117. In response to this request, the Venice Commission adopted,
at its 73rd plenary session on 14 and 15 December 2007, an opinion
on the Electoral Law of the United Kingdom (CDL-AD(2007)046) (see
appendix).
118. With regard to the household registration system, the Venice
Commission noted that Council of Europe standards demand that, in
order to adhere to the principle of the universality of the vote,
voters’ registers should be permanent, published, regularly updated,
and there should be a proper administrative procedure, under judicial
control, to allow voters to amend incorrect inscriptions and to
register in case they are missing from the voters’ list. While the
household registration does not run counter to these standards,
the Venice Commission noted that the combination of a household
registration system with the lack of personal identifiers raises
serious doubts about the eventual inaccuracies of the system and
the eventual fraudulent use that may stem from these. There are
no means of validating registration at source and this combined
with the lack of personal identifiers may question the reliability
of the system.
Note
119. In relation to the postal voting arrangements, the Venice
Commission notes that the principle of remote and absentee voting
(including postal and proxy voting) does not run counter to Council
of Europe standards. However, for the postal voting arrangements
to be in line with Council of Europe standards they need to preclude
fraud or intimidation, prevent family voting, be based on a safe
and reliable transport system and the need to ensure the secrecy
of the vote. After a careful analysis of the Electoral Law, the
Venice Commission concluded that the current arrangements, especially
after the adoption of the 2006 amendments, strike a reasonable balance
between these criteria and the legitimate goal of increasing the
participation in the elections. Remote and absentee voting arrangements
do have an inherent vulnerability for electoral fraud and malpractice,
especially with regard to the secrecy of the vote, but this is not
solely a United Kingdom problem. The current postal voting arrangements
therefore do not run counter to Council of Europe standards.
Note
120. In relation to the differences in the legal electoral requirements
between Northern Ireland and the rest of the United Kingdom, the
Venice Commission noted that it is perfectly possible and acceptable
that a legal system has different norms that apply in different
parts of a territory and rule the same event. However, it must respect
the general principles of law, including the respect for fundamental
rights, the rule of law and democratic principles, in particular
the principle of equality. Article 3 of Protocol No. 1 of the ECHR
Note implies “the
principle of equality of treatment of all citizens in the exercise
of the right to vote and their right to stand for election.”
Note In
a case concerning Northern Ireland, the European Court of Human
Rights ruled that the application of a different electoral system
in a part of the country is not contrary to Article 3 of Protocol
No. 1 if supported by a legitimate aim and if the means proposed
are not disproportional.
Note In
addition the principle of equality demands that they are not arbitrary.
The Electoral Fraud (Northern Ireland) Act (2002) and subsequent provisions
were adopted to address a widespread concern about electoral fraud
in Northern Ireland. The aim supporting the different requirements
can therefore be considered fully legitimate. Moreover, the arrangements for
voter registration and postal voting are in line with Council of
Europe standards and do not infringe on the right to vote. They
are therefore neither arbitrary nor disproportional. On that basis,
the Venice Commission concluded that the differences in registration
systems and postal voting arrangements between Northern Ireland
and the rest of the United Kingdom do not run counter to Council
of Europe standards.
Note
121. It should be noted that legal provisions that are in conformity
with Council of Europe standards do not guarantee per se that the
electoral process itself is in line with these standards. Governments
have the responsibility to put an electoral system in place that
is as robust as practically possible against malpractice and electoral
fraud.
122. It is important to note in that respect that the Venice Commission
concluded that the continuous individual voter registration system
as used in Northern Ireland “complies better [than the household registration
system] with the principles of good practice in electoral matters
and with the European electoral heritage that underlies them and
it could be appropriate to extend it to Great Britain.”
Note In
addition, the Venice Commission considered that the rules for postal
voting in Northern Ireland “guarantee in a better way the principle
of free elections, and allow the citizens exercising their right
to vote by post in a more secure and confident way”
Note than
those in Great Britain.
123. According to the opinion, the transport of postal ballots
needs to be safe, reliable and protected from deliberate manipulation
in order for the postal voting arrangements to be in line with Council
of Europe standards.
Note It can therefore be derived from
the opinion that the handling of postal ballots and applications
by persons who have no legal necessity to do so – such as party
activists – is contrary to Council of Europe standards.
13 Conclusions and recommendations
124. Postal voting on demand is
an important means to counter the increasingly lower turnout at
elections in Britain, and indeed in other European states, and is
a preferred option for many voters. It is therefore without doubt
for the rapporteurs that postal voting, as well as other arrangements
for absentee voting, will continue to be an integral aspect of the
British electoral system. As mentioned, absentee voting, including
postal voting, does not run counter to Council of Europe standards
for democratic elections, on the condition that the security of
the vote is guaranteed.
125. Based upon a request by the Chairman of the Monitoring Committee,
the Venice Commission adopted an opinion on the Electoral Law in
the United Kingdom. This opinion concludes that the legal provisions
for postal voting and household registration used in Great Britain
do not per se run counter to Council of Europe standards, but that
the individual registration system with personal identifiers as
used in Northern Ireland better complies with these standards than
the household registration system used in the rest of the United
Kingdom.
126. From the Venice Commission opinion it can furthermore be derived
that the handling of postal ballots by third persons who have no
legal necessity to do so, such as party activists, runs counter
to Council of Europe standards. The rapporteurs therefore strongly
recommend to the British authorities to prohibit this practice for future
elections.
127. It is clear that the electoral system in Great Britain is
open to electoral fraud. This vulnerability is mainly the result
of the, rather arcane, system of voter registration without personal
identifiers and exacerbated by the introduction of postal voting
on demand, especially under the arrangements as existed before the
changes in the Electoral Code in 2006.
128. The crucial weakness of the household registration system
is that it precludes the registration of personal identifiers. This,
in combination with the absence of any form of civil registry, makes
it childishly simple to register bogus voters on the voters’ list,
and makes the verification of these lists practically impossible.
While voting inside a polling station on behalf of bogus entries
on the voters’ lists is necessarily only possible on a limited scale,
and bears a heightened chance of detection, the postal voting arrangements
provide both the means and anonymity to do so without restrictions.
129. The 2006 changes to the Electoral Code closed many of the
loopholes that allowed for the fraudulent application, redirecting,
and casting of postal ballots on behalf of legitimate voters, which
were an important vehicle for electoral fraud during previous elections.
In addition they address the problem of disenfranchisement of these
legitimate voters as a result of a fraudulent application in their
name. In that respect the 2006 changes to the Electoral Code significantly
enhanced the security of the postal voting arrangements.
130. However, none of the 2006 changes to the Electoral Code addressed
the vulnerability of electoral fraud by means of bogus entries on
the voters’ register. While it is recognised that it would take
a considerable degree of premeditation and organisation of a candidate
or party to change the outcome of an election by these means, this
vulnerability continues to be very much present in the British electoral
system.
131. In the light of the vulnerabilities of the electoral system,
and their obvious exploitation, the rapporteurs are at a loss to
understand why the provisions in the Electoral Fraud (Northern Ireland)
Act of 2002
Note are not implemented
across the board in the United Kingdom, especially taking into account
the positive experiences with these provisions in Northern Ireland.
In this respect the rapporteurs can only question the reluctance,
or even refusal, of the current British Government to introduce
individual voter registration with personal identifiers, despite
strong recommendations to the contrary by the Electoral Commission,
the Committee on Standards in Public Life, as well as most other
election experts.
132. The official argument that there is little statistical evidence
to support the notion that electoral fraud is widespread in Great
Britain is clearly not valid and does not seem to be substantiated
by the recent investigations into electoral fraud. It should be
noted in this context that there were equally no official statistics to
support the notion that electoral fraud was rampant in Northern
Ireland before the Electoral Fraud (Northern Ireland) Act was adopted
in 2002. In that case the government, rightfully, concluded that
countering the public perception that electoral fraud was widespread,
was an important objective in its own right.
133. Equally, the argument that the introduction of an individual
registration system with personal identifiers would result in a
significant group of eligible voters being disenfranchised does
not seem to be corroborated by the experience from Northern Ireland
after individual registration was implemented in 2002.
Note
134. While recognising that, within the limits of the principles
that govern democratic elections, governments have the freedom to
chose the electoral system that best serves the need of their country,
the rapporteurs also are convinced that governments are under the
obligation to ensure that the electoral system is as robust as possible.
Leaving known vulnerabilities in an electoral system unaddressed
runs counter to this principle. In addition, high public confidence
in the electoral system is crucial for the conduct of democratic
elections. It is beyond questioning that the public confidence in
the electoral system in Great Britain has suffered as a result of
the cases of electoral fraud that have come to light. This alone
should be sufficient rationale for corrective measures.
135. The rapporteurs therefore urge the British authorities to
introduce a system of individual voter registration with appropriate
personal identifiers in line with the recommendations of the Electoral
Commission and the Committee on Standards in Public Life. The local
voters’ lists should be linked to a nationwide database in order
to be able to identify multiple registrations. The rapporteurs would
also like to strongly recommend the British authorities to consider
introducing in Great Britain the other security enhancing measures
contained in the Electoral Fraud (Northern Ireland) Act of 2002,
such as for instance the need to provide identification in order
to vote. The regulations governing the validity of cast ballots
should explicitly invalidate any altered ballots, as the current
regulations that allow altered ballots to be considered valid opens
an avenue for electoral fraud.
136. As an immediate measure to ensure the effectiveness of the
provisions to combat electoral fraud in the 2006 electoral legislation,
the rapporteurs strongly recommend that the checking of personal
identifiers on 100% of the returned postal ballots is made mandatory
by law in all of Great Britain before the next elections take place.
137. Despite the vulnerabilities in the electoral system, there
is no doubt that elections in the United Kingdom are conducted democratically
and represent the free expression of the will of the British people.
Note It can therefore not be argued
that the United Kingdom has fallen short on honouring its democratic
commitments to the Council of Europe and we can therefore not recommend
opening a monitoring procedure with respect of the United Kingdom.
138. It should be stressed however, that the United Kingdom delivers
democratic elections despite the vulnerabilities in its electoral
system. The shortcomings noted in this report could, by the same
token, easily affect the overall democratic nature of elections
in Great Britain. The rapporteurs would therefore recommend that
the Monitoring Committee, in its periodic reports on the honouring
of commitments by member states not subject to a monitoring procedure,
pays special attention to electoral issues with respect of the United Kingdom.
If the vulnerabilities noted in this report remain unaddressed,
and are found to change the overall democratic nature of elections
in the United Kingdom, the Monitoring Committee should consider
applying to initiate a monitoring procedure in respect of the United
Kingdom.
Appendix –
European Commission for Democracy through Law (Venice Commission)
– Opinion on the Electoral Law of the United Kingdom
Strasbourg, 9 January 2008
CCL-AD(2007)046 Opinion No. 436/2007
Adopted by the Council for Democratic Elections at its 23rd
meeting (Venice, 13 December 2007) and the Venice Commission at
its 73rd plenary session (Venice, 14-15 December 2007) on the basis
of comments by Mr Carlos Closa Montero (member, Spain) and Mr Ugo
Mifsud Bonnici (member, Malta)
Introduction
1. Mr Eduard Lintner, Chairman
of the Committee on the Honouring of Obligations and Commitments
by Member States of the Council of Europe (Monitoring Committee),
informed the President of the European Commission for Democracy
through Law (Venice Commission), the late lamented Mr Antonio La
Pergola, by letter dated 24 April 2007, that this Monitoring Committee,
was currently investigating an application to initiate a monitoring
procedure to investigate electoral frauds in the United Kingdom
and that two rapporteurs had carried out a fact-finding visit to
the United Kingdom. The rapporteurs suggested that the Venice Commission be
requested to make an opinion. The Monitoring Committee decided,
during its meeting of 18 April 2007, to put the following three
questions to the Venice Commission:
1.1 Is the voters’ registration system in the United Kingdom
in line with Council of Europe standards, given in particular the
household registration as opposed to individual registration and
the relative lack of personal identifiers upon registration?
1.2 Is the manner in which postal voting is implemented in
line with Council of Europe standards, especially with regard to
the security of the vote?
1.3 Is the fact that different requirements are used for one
part of the country (Northern Ireland) with regard to voter registration
and postal voting for the same elections, in line with Council of
Europe standards?
2. This opinion is based on the following:
- the European Convention on Human Rights and its protocols
in addition to the Commission and European Court of Human Rights’
cases;
- the Code of Good Practice in Electoral Matters, Guidelines
and Explanatory Report, adopted by the Venice Commission at its
52nd plenary session (Venice, 18-19 October 2002) (CDLAD(2002)023rev);
- the Report on the Compatibility of Remote Voting and Electronic
Voting with the Standards of the Council of Europe, adopted by the
Venice Commission at its 58th plenary session (Venice, 12-13 March
2004) (CDL-AD(2004)012);
- the electoral legislation of the United Kingdom (see the
next paragraph).
3. There are several statutes in the United Kingdom that regulate
the electoral system, and that are relevant in the analysis of the
compliance of the rules regulating the voter registration and postal
voting with the standards of the Council of Europe. The most important
ones are:
- Representation of
the People Act 1983;
- Representation of the People Act 1985;
- Representation of the People Act 2000;
- Electoral Fraud (Northern Ireland) Act 2002;
- Electoral Administration Act 2006;
- Northern Ireland (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2006.
The above-mentioned legislation are partly reproduced in Document
CDL-EL(2007)024, which also includes the Absent voting (transitional
provisions) (England and Wales) Regulations 2006.
4. A visit was made to the United
Kingdom on 10 December 2007, during which a delegation of the Venice Commission
met with representatives of the Electoral Commission, the Electoral
Office for Northern Ireland, the Electoral Registration Officers
and Returning Officers from Great Britain and the Parliamentary Undersecretary
of State in the Ministry of Justice.
5. The present opinion was adopted by the Council for Democratic
Elections at its 23rd meeting (Venice, 13 December 2007) and the
Venice Commission at its 73rd plenary session (Venice, 14-15 December
2007).
6. This opinion will tackle each question submitted by the Monitoring
Committee separately.
1. The
voter registration system in Great Britain and its compliance with
the Council of Europe standards
7. The United Kingdom comprises
England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. In electoral law, England,
Scotland and Wales are often covered by legislation made on a Great
Britain basis, and this term will be used hereafter.
8. In order to answer the first question, this section will focus
on the registration system in the United Kingdom, then on Council
of Europe standards on elections, and finally analyse the conformity
of the former to these standards.
1.1. The
voter registration system in Great Britain
9. The general requirements for
voter registration according to the electoral law of the United
Kingdom are settled in the Representation of the People Act of 1983,
as amended, particularly in Sections 8-13D. The relevant features
of the registration system are that it is a household system, that
the electoral officers have specific duties in order to prepare,
maintain and update the registers, and the lack of personal identifiers.
1.1.1.
Household system
10. Section 4 of the 1983 Act provides
that a person is entitled to be registered in the register of parliamentary
electors for any constituency or part of it if, on the relevant
date, he/she is:
a resident in that
constituency or part of it;
b not subject to a legal incapacity to vote (age apart);
c either a qualifying Commonwealth citizen or a citizen
of the Republic of Ireland;
d of voting age.
11. The electoral registration officers in England, Scotland and
Wales have the duty to prepare, maintain and publish a register
every year. For exercising their right to vote, the individuals
must be on the electoral register. The registration system is based
on an annual registration form that the householder must complete on
behalf of all the eligible individuals residing in each property,
and then to return this form to the registration office. The forms
have an “effective date of 15 October” each year. The Representation
of the People Act 2000 introduced a mechanism of voluntary “rolling”
(continuous) registration, by which individuals can modify their details
and personal information contained in the register outside the period
of annual canvass, and can also notify their eligibility to register.
The main problem of the current household system is that the electors
are registered by address without any personal identifier (such
as date of birth, signature or national insurance number).
12. In Great Britain, the registration follows a household model:
the main way of registering continues to be through the annual canvass
forms that the registration officer sends to each address, and in
which the householder provides the information about the persons
that live at that address and who are entitled to vote.
Note One
person signs each canvass form. This means that only one person
is responsible for the accuracy of the information of all the voters
in a household.
Note
1.1.2.
Duty to prepare, maintain and update registers
13. Every registration office shall
prepare two types of registers, a register of parliamentary electors
and a register of local government electors, each of which shall
contain the name of the person, his or her address and electoral
number. Concerning the maintenance of the registers, Section 10
establishes the duty (subject to the prescribed exceptions) of each
registration office to conduct an annual canvass in the area under
their jurisdiction “for ascertaining the persons who are for the
time being entitled to be, or to remain, registered in his registers”.
In the case of Northern Ireland, as it will be seen below, the form
and timing of the canvass are subject to strict rules.
Note
14. A further related feature is the maintenance of the registers,
particularly the rules referred to incorporation or elimination
of electors’ entries. Based on the results of the annual canvass,
the registration officers shall make the alterations in their registers
in accordance with Section 10A. This section regulates several circumstances
such as entitlement to be registered and to be treated as being
registered; entitlement to remain registered and termination of
the entitlement to remain registered. If, as a result of a canvass,
a form completed in respect of an address “specifies any person
as a person who is entitled to be registered in a register” and
the person has not, for the time being, been registered in respect
of that address, “he shall be treated as having made, on 15 October
in the year in question, an application for registration in the
register in respect at that address”. The person already entered
in a register in respect of any address, is entitled to remain registered,
unless it is determined that the elector was not resident at that
address as legally required, or the form was not returned in respect
of that address, or for any other reason the information received
is insufficient to establish whether the elector was resident at
that address. In any of these cases, the registration office determines
that the elector has ceased to be resident at that address or has
failed to satisfy the conditions for registration, and it shall
remove the person’s entry from the register.
Note
15. The published version of a register that results from the
annual canvass can be altered if the registration officer, on the
basis of an application for registration made by a person in accordance
with the prescribed requirements, determines that the person is
entitled to be so registered (Section 13A of the Representation
of the People Act 1983).
16. The Electoral Administration Act 2006 incorporates an additional
mechanism for registration purposes (that, nonetheless, does not
substitute the registers maintained by each registration office):
the Co-ordinated on-line Record of Electors (the CORE scheme). In
the words of the General Note appended to the Act, “the CORE scheme
is an arrangement whereby a record of information currently held
only by several locally based electoral registration officers can
be consolidated at one central point”. The CORE scheme is a new
tool for consolidating, at one central point, the electoral registration
information that several locally based electoral registration officers
currently hold. For the United Kingdom, it represents an unprecedented
attempt of unifying and updating the various local registers. The
CORE scheme is to be used for electoral purposes, and additionally
for the jury service. However, no orders have been made to establish
a CORE scheme.
1.1.3.
Lack of personal identifiers upon registration
17. The Great Britain registration
system does not require any personal identifiers for registration.
The traditional British respect for privacy makes the requirement
of personal identifiers problematic. Whilst the government has enacted
legislation on an identity card in 2006, this does not automatically
imply that it can be used for electoral purposes. Another example
of the traditional British mistrust of public use of private information
is Section 9 of the Representation of the People Act of 2000, which
provides for drawing up of two electoral registers, one (“the full
register”) complying with the provisions of the act, and another
(“the edited register”) omitting the names and addresses of registered
voters who have requested these details not to be published.
Note
18. The system relies on an individual’s honesty. There is a normal
general assumption that people declare the truth, which is followed
by the wise provision of sanctions against those who do not. The
Representation of the People Act of 1983, in Section 13D, makes
it an offence for a person to provide any false information to the registration
officer for any purpose connected with the registration of electors.
Even a false signature [not the usual signature or one written by
another person] constitutes false information. The punishment is commensurate
to six months’ imprisonment or a fine not exceeding the fifth level
on the standard scale.
1.2. UN
and Inter-Parliamentary Union standards
19. Apart from the Council of Europe,
the Human Rights Committee of the United Nations, and the Inter-Parliamentary
Union have proposed standards on elections.
20. The United Nations’ Human Rights Committee, which has a supervisory
role under the 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights, established during its 57th Session in 1996
Note, a list of international Standards
for Elections. It was established that any conditions which applied
to the exercise of the rights protected by Article 25 of the covenant
(which recognises and protects the right of every citizen to take
part in the conduct of public affairs, the right to vote and to
be elected, and the right to have access to public service) would
have to be based on objective and reasonable criteria. Thus, no
distinction can be made between citizens in the enjoyment of these
rights on the grounds of race, colour, sex, language, religion, political
or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or
other status. The right to vote at elections and referendums had
to be established by law and subjected only to reasonable restrictions,
such as setting a minimum age limit for the right to vote. It was
unreasonable to restrict the right to vote on the ground of physical disability
or to impose literacy, educational or property requirements. Furthermore,
states had to adopt effective measures to ensure that all persons
entitled to vote would be able to exercise that right, and should
facilitate registration of voters, when registration is required.
If residence requirements apply to registration, they must be reasonable,
and should not be imposed in such a way as to exclude the homeless
from the right to vote. Voter education and registration campaigns
are necessary to ensure the effective exercise of Article 25 rights by
an informed community. It is therefore sound to say that registration
(on the entitled voter’s initiative) is assumed to be in the covenant
a proper way of ensuring access and participation. In the Lippiatt
case, the county court judge allowed the application to register
of a “homeless” voter on the basis of a temporary (though of some
duration) residence in a constituency, even though the applicant
had no permanent home.
Note
21. The Inter-Parliamentary Union during its 154th Session (Paris,
26 March 1994) adopted a Declaration on Free and Fair Elections
Note urging governments and parliaments
throughout the world to be guided by the principles and standards
set out therein. In particular, it specified that states should
recognise and make provision for: the right of the individual to
vote, on a non-discriminatory basis, and the right of the individual
to access an effective, impartial and non-discriminatory procedure
for the registration of voters.
1.3. Council
of Europe standards concerning registration for elections
22. The Code of Good Practice in
Electoral Matters of the Venice Commission provides some criteria
to consider reliable electoral registers:
i electoral registers must be permanent;
ii there must be regular up-dates, at least once a year.
Where voters are not registered automatically, registration must
be possible over a relatively long period;
iii electoral registers must be published;
iv there should be an administrative procedure – subject
to judicial control – or a judicial procedure, allowing for the
registration of a voter who was not registered; the registration
should not take place at the polling station on election day;
v a similar procedure should allow voters to have incorrect
inscriptions amended;
vi a supplementary register may be a means of giving the
vote to persons who have moved or reached statutory voting age since
final publication of the register.
23. The code envisages that registration can either be automatic
(presumably on reaching a certain age or on taking up residence)
or initiated by the voter or on his/her behalf. This implies that
even though automatic voter registration might be the general rule
in many countries, there is no infringement of standards when the alternative
non-automatic registration system is allowed to continue to exist,
co-exist or be maintained. The next section will examine whether
the United Kingdom system adheres to the six criteria of the code.
1.4. Compliance
of the Great Britain system of electoral registration with electoral
standards
i. Is the
electoral register permanent?
24. Section 9 of the 1983 Act provides
that the registration officers [appointed for every district and
London Borough under Section 8] shall maintain a. a register of
parliamentary electors for each constituency or part of a constituency
in the area for which they would be responsible and b. a register
of local government areas or parts of local government areas for
which they acted. The Section further details what should be contained
in the registers.
Note
25. The duty to conduct an annual canvass imposes a responsibility
on the state to ensure full registration without discarding the
original reliance on the voter’s urge to register.
26. Furthermore, under Part 2 of the Electoral Administration
Act of 2006, the legislator has given the electoral registration
officers (EROs) new and more proactive powers in seeking to take
steps to register eligible electors, and to ensure registers are
as complete and accurate as possible. Nevertheless, these powers
have not been used.
ii. Are
there provisions for regular up-dates, at least once a year? Where
voters are not voted automatically registration must be possible
over a relatively long period
27. A revised version of the registers,
as it results from the annual canvass and other modifications introduced
during the year, have to be published yearly. The annual canvass
would undoubtedly produce some changes in the register [the deceased
to be erased, those sentenced to prison or remitted to mental hospitals, those
who come to the voting age, new entitled residents, those who have
definitively left their residence]. With the possibility of continuous
registration during the year and after the canvass, the requirement
of having long periods for registration is fulfilled. On the other
hand, alterations on the published version of a register pending elections
have effects for the purposes of the election only if they are made
before the fifth day prior to the date of the poll (Section 13B,
Representation of the People Act 1983).
iii. Electoral
registers must be published
28. As already pointed out, Section
13 of the 1983 Act bound each registration officer to publish each
year a revised version of his/her registers. Section 13 (1), as
amended by Schedule 1 of the Representation of the People Act 2000,
prescribes further that:
“(1)
Following the conclusion of the canvass conducted by a registration
officer for any year under Section 10 above, the officer shall publish
a revised version of both of his registers (the “full” and the “edited”
one) in the following periods:
(a) by 1 December in that year; or
(b) by such later date as regulations may prescribe.
(2) The revised versions of the registers shall incorporate
(a) all the alterations which are required to be made
in them as mentioned in Section 10(6) above; and
(b) any alterations which are required to be made by virtue
of Section 13A(3) below.
(3) A registration officer may in addition, if he thinks
fit, publish a revised version of either of his registers at any
time between
(a) the time when the register was last published in accordance
with subsection 1 above; and
(b) the time when it is due to be next so published;
and a registration officer proposing to publish a revised
version of a register in accordance with this subsection must publish
notice of his intention to do so by such time and in such manner
as may be prescribed”.
iv. There
should be an administrative procedure – subject to judicial control
– or a judicial procedure, allowing for the registration of a voter
who was not registered; the registration should not take place at
the polling station on election day
30. Sections 13A and 13B deal with the alteration of registers,
and prevent their precipitous and unsafe alteration on the polling
date or in the immediately preceding five days.
v. A similar
procedure should allow voters to have incorrect inscriptions amended
31. As pointed out above, since 2000,
there is a possibility of a rolling registration throughout the
year on an individual basis and also the possibility for individuals
to amend their details as they appear on the register.
vi. A supplementary
register may be a means of giving the vote to persons who have moved
or reached statutory voting age since the final publication of the
register
32. This guideline is meant for automatic
registration systems, and since Great Britain does not have such a
registration system, it does not apply.
33. At first sight, Great Britain’s system does not seem to contradict
these standards. However, the combination of a household registration
system with the lack of personal identifiers raises serious doubts
about the eventual inaccuracies of the system and the eventual fraudulent
use that may stem from these. There are no means of validating registration
at source and this combined with the lack of personal identifiers
may question the reliability of the system (apart from the duty
of registration officers to take reasonable steps to obtain information).
2. Postal
voting in Great Britain and its compliance with the Council of Europe
standards
2.1. Postal
voting in Great Britain
34. Historically, the special arrangement
for voting by post was the result of the large number of servicemen still
abroad after the November armistice of the 1914-18 war, so as to
enable them to vote in the December 1918 general election (see the
Representation of the People Act of 1918). Postal voting in the
case of the British armies still abroad in 1918 was a success because
it was orderly and disciplined. People with physical disabilities
or that could justify their absence were gradually allowed to use
these arrangements until 2000.
35. By implementing a recommendation by a Home Office working
party, which had been given the mandate of making suggestions as
to the way of increasing trust in the democratic process and participation
in elections, both national and local, Section 10 of the Representation
of the People Act 2000, gave the Secretary of State discretion,
after consulting the Electoral Commission, to approve schemes (pilot
schemes) in particular local government elections, for the use of
only postal votes, with no polling stations. At the same time, postal
voting became unrestricted in Great Britain – that is that no justification
has to be made for voting by mail. This is known as “postal voting
on demand”. When it was opened as a general option, the whole gamut
of problems inherent in postal voting came to the fore. Some people
were still reticent and some had realised its potential for manipulation.
The use of “all postal voting” in some electoral trials exacerbated
the situation.
36. As for electoral registration, the issue of absent voting
has also been a matter of concern over recent years. The Electoral
Commission began reviewing the law and practice of absent voting
in Great Britain in November 2001, in order to identify problems
of fraud, secrecy and administration, among others.
Note The
House of Commons has also produced some standard notes on postal
voting.
Note The
amendments of the absent voting rules should try, mainly, to balance
the tension between, on the one hand, promoting electoral participation, and
on the other, protecting the democratic process and individual votes,
by introducing security measures and building public confidence.
37. The United Kingdom has two forms of absent voting: postal
voting and proxy voting. This report will focus only on postal voting
as one form of absent or remote voting, and on postal voting on
demand, that is, requested by the elector.
Note Two
aspects are important here: the application for postal voting and
the returning of the postal ballot.
38. The manner of applying for postal voting in parliamentary
elections in the United Kingdom is ruled by Section 12 and Schedule
4 of the Representation of the People Act 2000,
Note as amended in 2006. The main change
in the postal voting system was the collection of personal identifiers
(signature and date of birth) for the application of postal voting.
In general, both in the cases of absent voting at elections for
a definite or an indefinite period and absent voting for a particular
election, the registration officer shall grant the application to vote
by post if
a. he/she is satisfied
that the applicant is or will be registered in the register of parliamentary electors,
local government electors or both (as the case may be), and
b. the application contains the
applicant’s signature and date of birth and meets the prescribed
requirements (Schedule 4, paragraphs 3(1), 4(1)). The registration
officer shall keep a postal voters’ list of those whose application
to vote by post at the election has been granted, together with
the addresses provided by them in their applications as the addresses
to which their ballot papers are to be sent (Schedule 4, paragraph
5(1)).
39. The rules for returning the ballot are in Schedule 1 of the
Representation of the People Act 1983, particularly under Rules
24, 31A and 45, also amended in 2006. For the postal ballot to be
valid, it must be returned with a postal voting statement that contains
the signature of the elector and his/her date of birth. If the postal
ballot is duly returned together with the postal voting statement,
the returning officer shall mark the name of the person in the postal
voters’ list. The returning officer must verify that the signature
and date of birth match those in their record, at present for at
least a minimum of 20% of returned postal voting statements.
Note Doubts may
persist on whether checking a sample secures the accuracy of the
totality of the votes.
2.2. Council
of Europe standards concerning postal voting
40. According to the report of the
Venice Commission on remote and electronic voting, remote voting, defined
as “voting outside the premises where voting takes place in general”,
is in principle permitted. Moreover, it is a common electoral procedure
in a great number of the member states of the Council of Europe, even
if there is a considerable diversity between these systems and it
is difficult to identify shared or common standards. Remote voting
can take place in a controlled or supervised environment, or in
an uncontrolled or non-supervised environment.
Note
41. In order to determine the compatibility of a certain system
of remote or absent voting with the standards of the Council of
Europe, we need to see in detail if the legislation guarantees measures
to avoid fraud or intimidation and prevents family voting, if the
conditions of the national postal service are safe and reliable
(i.e. if it is protected from deliberate manipulation and it operates
correctly), and if the secrecy of the vote is secured. These conclusions
can be reached by analysing the guideline I.3.2. of the Code of
Good Practice in Electoral Matters, and the corresponding paragraph
38 of its explanatory report. Besides the need of an appropriate legislation,
the compatibility will depend on the implementation of postal voting
and the particular technical and social conditions of the country
or area where it applies.
2.3. Compliance
of the postal voting system of Great Britain with the Council of
Europe standards
42. Problems of fraud in postal voting
have produced concern in recent years in the United Kingdom and even
motivated a number of changes in the legislation. In the local election
of 2004, an allegation was raised denouncing postal voting fraud
in the Birmingham wards of Bordesley Green and Aston.
Note Following the Decision by Richard
Mawrey, QC on this case, which found massive electoral fraud through
the misuse of the postal vote in Birmingham, there was a general
reappraisal of the system. The intention was to “save” postal voting,
and incidentally not to impede the introduction of e-voting. At
the same time, stricter measures, which render manipulation of the
system by political agents difficult, were introduced. Thus, the
Electoral Administration Act of 2006 introduces several measures
in this direction.
Note First,
Section 14 of that act introduces personal identifiers for postal
voting (i.e. signature and date of birth). Second, Section 15 rules offences
as to false registration of information. Third, Section 39 introduces
changes in the offences of undue influence. Fourth, Section 40 prescribes
offences relating to applications for postal and proxy votes.
Note
43. In 2004, the Electoral Commission called for an end to all
postal voting.
Note In
a similar vein, and after the publishing of reports on various pilot
schemes, the Electoral Commission, on 2 August 2007, called for
an end to trials of telephone and internet voting until the government
had set out a strategy for modernising the electoral system and
made it more secure.
Note
44. Certain inherent difficulties in postal, proxy or e-voting
can never be completely overcome. The advantage and convenience
to the electors, and therefore incidentally their contribution to
the overall aim of greater voter participation, have to be balanced
with the inevitable dangers and risks of these absent voting systems.
One may doubt whether
de minimis should
be applied in electoral matters a priori. That is a political decision
to be taken by each individual country. One realises, however, that
if voting takes place in an unsupervised context, it is virtually
impossible to guarantee that it will be carried out in secret, and
that lack of secrecy constitutes a serious violation of the principles
of freedom and fairness that govern elections in democratic states.
This applies to proxy, postal or e-voting, that is, to all variations
of absent voting. It seems that in Great Britain, after the Howarth
Report (1999),
Note the
advantages of absent voting were seen as outweighing the disadvantages.
The Acts of 2000 and 2006 sought to circumscribe the threats of
major electoral frauds by imposing criminal sanctions on some of
the more evident cases of organised manipulation or abuse. However,
the stray individual act of undue influence or corrupt practice
remains very difficult to trace and punish. Apart from bona fide
attitude by citizens, the threat of sanctions seems to be the most
effective measure to prevent fraud and to guarantee accuracy of
postal voting.
45. Again, the lack of personal identifiers may be a source of
inaccuracies and this, combined with the reduced number of checks
(i.e. 20%) may eventually create some base for electoral fraud.
3. The
different requirements of voter registration and postal voting in
Northern Ireland and its compliance with the Council of Europe standards
3.1. General
issues
46. In the United Kingdom the traditional
divisions of the different constituent nations (Wales, Scotland, Northern
Ireland, and England) find expression in legal institutions. The
electoral laws, time and again, refer to this distinction. In the
case of Northern Ireland the different provisions were not merely
the result of deference to historical traditions, but also a reaction
to a tense political situation.
47. It must be underlined that the reason for the Parliamentary
Assembly’s inquiry is the different regulation and electoral requirements
used in one part of the country as compared to the requirements
applied to the other parts of the country in one and the same election
procedure.
Note
48. In general terms, it is perfectly possible and acceptable
that a legal system has different norms that apply in different
parts of its territory and that rule the same event. However, when
the legislator chooses this option, it must respect the general
principles of law: fundamental rights, the rule of law, and the
democratic principles. The principle of equality is particularly
relevant in this case. The general principle of equality of all
persons before the law is enforced through the corollary general
prohibition of discrimination, as settled in Article 14 of the European
Convention on Human Rights and its Protocol No. 12. These principles
taken together mean that the states cannot adopt discriminatory
measures or differences between citizens, unless those measures
are reasonable and tend to promote full and effective equality.
In other words, the difference should be justified. Thus, if the
legislation establishes different requirements for exercising an
individual right, for instance the right to vote, the differences
should be reasonably justified, or else, held as arbitrary and discriminatory.
49. The European Court of Human Rights has interpreted the principle
of free elections of Article 3 of Protocol No. 1 of the European
Convention on Human Rights in relation to the principle of equality.
According to the Court, the expression “under conditions which will
ensure the free expression of the opinion of the people in the choice
of the legislature” implies “the principle of equality of treatment
of all citizens in the exercise of their right to vote and their
right to stand for election”.
Note
50. The European Court of Human Rights has also clearly declared
that the rights set out in Article 3 of Protocol No. 1 are not absolute,
but may be subject to limitations. Since Article 3 recognises them
without setting them forth in express form, let alone defining them,
there is room for “implied limitations”.
NoteNote
51. Taken together, the possibility of establishing limitations
and/or conditions to the exercise of rights and the principle of
equality, national legislation introducing limitations or creating
different situations should satisfy the implicit criteria inspiring
that principle: reasonableness, justifiability and non arbitrariness.
On this line, in a case concerning Northern Ireland, the European
Commission of Human Rights held that the application of a particular
electoral system to a part of the country is not contrary to Article
3 if sustained by objective and reasonable justification and the
means proposed are not disproportionate.
Note More specifically,
when elections for the European Parliament were introduced, the
single transferable vote system of proportional representation was
adopted for Northern Ireland so as to ensure that the minority would
not be totally deprived of representation. When this differentiation
from the rest of the United Kingdom was contested (where a different
form of proportional representation is now used), the application
to the European Commission of Human Rights was dismissed as inadmissible.
52. Building on this case, the European Commission of Human Rights
later refined the principles governing the scrutiny of the elements
of an electoral system. Whilst states have a wide margin of appreciation
on the introduction of conditions to voting rights, these conditions
must satisfy the following criteria: they do not curtail the rights
in question to such an extent as to impair their very essence and
deprive them of their effectiveness; they must pursue a legitimate
aim and the means must be proportional.
Note Both cases referred to (Lindsay, and Polacco
and Garafalo) are slightly different in their facts; the first refers
to the use of a single transferable vote for the EP elections in
Northern Ireland, the latter to the registration requirements for
the regional elections in Trentino-Alto Adige. The principles, however,
are general enough so as to inspire the examination of other elements
of an electoral system.
53. The legitimate aim pursued in both cases (Lindsay, and Polacco
and Garafalo), generally stated was the protection of a minority.
In both cases, the Commission argued that “any electoral system
must be assessed in the light of the political evolution of the
country concerned; features that would be unacceptable in the context of
one system may accordingly be justified in the context of another,
at least so long as the chosen system provides for conditions which
will ensure the free expression of the opinion of the people in
the choice of the legislature”.
54. Hence, the legitimate aim pursued renders acceptable an element
of differentiation, which prima facie might be perceived as contrary
to the equality principle. This aim must be assessed coherently
in the context of the United Kingdom electoral legislation and the
differences introduced.
55. The sovereign United Kingdom Parliament can pass legislation
on electoral matters, that is one of the issues in which it has
reserved powers to legislate (except for Scottish local elections).
In other words, it is a political and legal decision of Westminster
to enact laws that settle different requirements for voter registration and
postal voting applicable to different parts of the territory. In
the case under study, the different requirements for electors to
register and to vote by post, and, in this way, the different requisites
for the citizens to exercise the right to vote are based on a territorial
criterion. Electors living in different places of the United Kingdom
must observe different standards for voting in the same parliamentary
election. In the case of Northern Ireland, the electoral system
has been tailored to adapt to historical circumstances: political
conflicts within Northern Ireland; social perception of electoral
fraud as a significant problem inside this territory; distrust of
the system of absent voting; and problems of persistent fraud and
lack of transparency in past elections.
56. The reasons that justified the introduction of tighter controls
and requisites to voter registration and absent voting – that, in
short, consist of providing several personal identifiers both for
individual registration or individual application to vote by post
– were the perception of high levels of fraud, the inaccuracy of
the registers and the insecurity of postal voting. These reasons
motivated the enactment of the Electoral Fraud (Northern Ireland)
Act 2002 and the ulterior norms (which are exposed more in detail
below).
57. Fighting electoral fraud is no doubt a legitimate aim that
may warrant measures of differentiation within an electoral system.
Measures adopted in fighting electoral fraud guarantee the equality
among citizens (by removing non legitimated expressions of opinion)
and improve the electoral process on the whole. In general terms,
it may be concluded that the United Kingdom authorities pursue a
legitimate aim when enacting these provisions. A different question,
which will be discussed in more detail below, refers to the proportionality
of the measure.
58. Moreover, the enactment of these measures complies with an
additional criterion regulating the principle of equality: non arbitrariness.
This means that the logical connection between the legitimate aim
pursued and the measures proposed can be imputed to a careful study
of the facts and a perusal of the available means. In the case under
review, the measures cannot be considered arbitrary at all, since
they result from a detailed process of fact finding and adjustment
of legislation. Thus, the United Kingdom Government and Parliament have
been concerned with the existence of electoral fraud in Northern
Ireland in the last years. In 2001, the government reviewed the
situation and made a number of recommendations in order to improve
the legislation and the measures to combat fraud.
Note This sustained situation motivated
the enactment of the Electoral Fraud (Northern Ireland) Act 2002.
However, the Parliament has conducted a study and inquiries on the
same topic, the results of which are compiled in two reports of
Session 2004-2005.
Note Finally, the Electoral Commission
has also followed the electoral reforms in Northern Ireland, its
effects and its consequences, especially the voter registration
decline, due both to people not responding to the canvass and people
never being registered.
Note Within
this framework, the Commission gave a commitment to monitor the
impact of the act on electoral registration and commissioned a series
of registration updates focusing on various aspects of the registration process,
the last of which is from 22 August 2007.
Note
59. 59. Therefore, the existence of differences in the regulation
of registration and postal voting in Northern Ireland are reasonably
justified by the particular historical and socio-political circumstances
of this part of the United Kingdom. Thus, different regulations
per se do not violate the standards of the Council of Europe. A different
question to be scrutinised is whether the specific requirements
do not contravene the principle of proportionality.
3.2. Specific
issues
60. The different requirements and
particularities in the United Kingdom electoral legislation for
Northern Ireland concern both voter registration and postal voting.
61. The aim of the scrutiny is twofold: firstly, it aims at contrasting
these provisions with the standards of the Council of Europe. It
may happen that, even if they prescribe more exigent requisites,
they adjust better to the general directives in order to prevent
fraud, ensure secret voting, and maintain accurate and complete
electoral registers for the electors to exercise their right to
vote. The characteristics of the electoral registers and the minimum
requirements for postal voting, as established by the Code of Good
Practice in Electoral Matters, will be taken into account in the
analysis of this perspective below. Secondly, it will be pondered
whether the requirements are proportionate.
3.2.1.
Voter registration
62. Despite the system described
above (see paragraphs 9-12) Northern Ireland has special rules for registration
of voters that regulate:
- A
system of individual registration, providing the personal data required;
- the duty of the Chief Electoral Officer to conduct a canvass
according to the timing settled by the act, rather than each year
as in Great Britain;
- the additional information that the voter must provide
in order to be included in the register;
- the relevant registration objectives;
- the alteration of registers pending elections;
- the electoral identity card.Note
63. The special rules are a result of the amendments introduced
both by the Electoral Fraud (Northern Ireland) 2002 and the Northern
Ireland (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2006, acts that sought to
reduce the electoral fraud, make the system more transparent,
Note and improve the mechanism of registration
of electors.
64. The Electoral Fraud (Northern Ireland) Act 2002 substituted
the system of household registration in force until that moment
Note with
an individual registration system, whereby eligible electors have
to complete an individual registration form on an annual basis.
There was not, then, an automatic system for first registration nor
for re-registering each year on the basis of the register of the
previous year, but it was necessary both for people never being
registered and for people already registered to complete annually
a registration form and present it to the electoral office.
65. The problems generated by the Electoral Fraud (Northern Ireland)
Act 2002 pushed the government to enact the Electoral Registration
(Northern Ireland) Act 2005, which ordered the reinsertion into
the electoral register of names previously removed. Thus, this act
reinstated electors onto the register who had been previously registered,
but chose not to re-register, as a transitional measure. For achieving
this task, the later act set up temporary amendments in subsection
7 of Section 10A.
Note
66. Further amendments concerning registration were introduced
by the Northern Ireland (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2006. This
act removed the requirement for an annual canvass and fixed dates
for the preparation of the register by the electoral officer. Instead
of the system of annual canvass, the act implements a system of
continuous registration based on individual registration, in which
the electors will register once and will need to re-register only
if their details change. Every ten years, or as deemed necessary,
the Chief Electoral Officer will undertake a canvass.
67. A chief electoral officer whose work is supported by the Electoral
Office for Northern Ireland (EONI)
Note administers the electoral system
in Northern Ireland. The chief electoral officer is both the registration
officer and the returning officer for each constituency (Sections
8(4) and 26(1) of the Representation of the People Act 1983).
68. The application form for the registration of an individual
elector in Northern Ireland includes the signature of the person,
the date of birth of each such person, his/her national insurance
number or the statement that he/she does not have one, a statement
of whether or not he/she has been resident in Northern Ireland for
the whole of the three-month period ending on the date of the application,
and any other address in the United Kingdom in respect of which
he/she is or has applied to be registered (Section 10A (1A) of the
Representation of the People Act 1983).
69. The relevant registration objectives of the Northern Ireland
system of registrations are to secure, so far as reasonably practicable,
“
a. that every person who
is entitled to be registered in a register is registered in it,
b. that no person who is not entitled
to be registered in a register is registered in it, and
c. that none of the required information
relating to any person registered in a register is false”.
Note
70. In order to achieve the relevant registration objectives,
the chief electoral officer can collect personal information through
the canvass, such as: a. the
person’s name; b. the person’s
qualifying address; c. the person’s
date of birth; d. subject
to some exceptions, the person’s signature; e.
the person’s national insurance number or a statement that he/she
does not have one (Section 10ZB (4) Representation of the People
Act 1983). The additional personal data gathered in the registration
process do not appear on the published register of electors. However,
it will be used to check the identity of the voters when they apply
to absent voting (by post or proxy), or can be used in the polling
station, before receiving the ballot (for example, the staff could ask
the date of birth should they have some concern as to the identity
of the elector).
71. The entitlement of the electors of Northern Ireland to remain
in the register terminates if:
a.
at a canvass their form does not contain the additional information
of Section 10 (4A) (signature; date of birth; national insurance
number or the voter makes a statement that he/she does not have
one; a statement that he/she has been resident in Northern Ireland
for the requisite three-month period before 15 October in the year
in question; and to state any other address in the United Kingdom
in this respect); or
b. if
the registration officer “determines that the elector was not entitled
to be registered in respect of that address or that he/she has ceased
to be resident at that address or has otherwise ceased to satisfy
the conditions for registration set out in Section 4 above”.
NoteNote
72. The alteration of the registers pending elections follows
different rules in the case of parliamentary elections in Northern
Ireland (Section 13BA). One important difference with respect to
the general rules of Section 13B is the time-limit to alter the
registers pending elections, since the general rule is that the
changes will have effect if they are made before the eleventh day
prior to the date of the poll,
Note whereas related to Northern
Ireland they will have effect if they are made before the final
nomination date.
Note
73. The Chief Electoral Officer must publish each year a revised
version of his/her registers, incorporating the alterations made
in them. If there is a canvass that year, the register shall be
published “during the period starting with the end of the canvass
in that year and ending with 1 December in that year or such later
date as may be prescribed”. If there is no canvass, it shall be
published “on 1 December in that year or by such later date as may
be prescribed”. In addition, the registration officer can publish
at any time in between a revised version of the register (Section
13, Representation of the People Act 1983).
74. Relating to electoral registers, guideline I.1.2. of the Code
of Good Practice in Electoral Matters recommends that they should
be permanent, regularly up-dated and published. Additionally, there
should be an administrative or judicial procedure allowing for the
registration of a voter who was not registered or to amend incorrect
inscriptions. If the eligible electors need to register to vote,
then the procedure of registration, the maintenance of the registers,
their amendment, and more broadly, their completeness and accuracy
are key ingredients in guaranteeing universal suffrage and in carrying
out democratic elections. The explanatory report, in its paragraph
7, adds a few directives to the general framework.
75. Comparing the registration system of Northern Ireland with
these standards, we can conclude that the former is in accordance
with the latter. There is a permanent register of parliamentary
electors kept by the Chief Electoral Officer. This register is regularly
up-dated, since amendments and new electors can be incorporated in
the register when requested throughout the year, and thus, allowing
registration for a long period (with the restrictions in case of
amendments pending elections). The electoral law also prescribes
that a revised version of the register must be published once a
year. There is as well a simple administrative procedure before
the Chief Electoral Officer for correcting the inaccuracies of the
registers, for removing unjustified entries, and for incorporating
electors entitled to register. In addition, Sections 56 and 58 of
the Representation of the People Act 1983 establish a procedure
of registration of appeals before the respective county court. Finally,
the closing of the register pending elections in the case of Northern
Ireland is in accordance with the standards as amendments are accepted
until the final nomination day, which is a reasonable period.
76. However, the continuous registration system based on individual
registration – implemented through the different amendments in the
last five years – also meets the standards of the Council of Europe.
It enables the electors to register personally through a registration
application form, for which they need to provide the personal information
requested. Some of this information will be used at the polling
station for checking the identity of the elector. It also permits
to delete errors and to introduce changes, for example, change of
address, when needed.
77. In summary, the rules that regulate the electoral registers
and registration procedure in Northern Ireland are in line with
the Council of Europe standards.
78. Moreover, the right to vote of citizens of Northern Ireland
is not affected by this different registration system, because the
more exigent requirements are not an obstacle for the elector to
exercise his/her right; they consist merely in giving some extra
personal data at the very moment when they apply to register. The fact
that these data are used for identifying the elector in the polling
station or in the postal voting system reduces the possibility of
impersonation and double registration. However, the problems of
inaccuracies of the registers derived from the household registration
system are reduced by this individual registration system. Finally,
the equality between citizens residing in Northern Ireland and the
rest of the territory of the United Kingdom is not undermined, because
the differentiation is not arbitrary but supported by a notorious
and persistent electoral fraud practice in that part of the territory
in the past.
79. Regarding this point, it is important to recall the guidelines
and explanatory report of the Code of Good Practice in Electoral
Matters about the meaning of the right to free elections: it includes
the freedom of voters to express their wishes and combating electoral
fraud. If it is considered that the aim of the voter registration system
is to remove the existing electoral fraud and to prevent it in future
elections, then it can be concluded that the means used to achieve
this legitimate aim, that is to say the settlement of an individual
registration system, which requires personal data, and the incorporation
of the possibility of continuous registration and amendments of
the registers, are proportionate. This proportionality derives from
the fact that the measure is suitable, necessary, tends towards
the protection of the right to vote, and it does not affect the
principle of equality, since the difference of requirements is reasonably
justified by the particular circumstances of Northern Ireland. Additionally,
electors have measures of redress following the procedures described
above (paragraph 11).
80. The overall context of Northern Ireland must also be taken
into account. According to guidelines I.1 (I.1.1.c) of the Code of Good Practice
in Electoral Matters, a residence requirement may be imposed solely
for local or regional elections, but should not exceed six months.
The three month residence requirement does not run counter to these
standards in terms of length, and does not in any way infringe the
democratic principle of free and fair elections. Its application
to general elections may be considered justified by the overall
context and situation of Northern Ireland, in which a very porous
border has historically allowed movement of citizens between countries
and the right to vote at all elections was given to Irish citizens.
3.2.2.
Postal voting
81. The Electoral Fraud (Northern
Ireland) Act 2002 introduced modifications in the Representation
of the People Act 1985 (Sections 5-11 and Schedule 2), that have
effects in the case of absent voting (by post or by proxy) only
in parliamentary elections in Northern Ireland.
Note An elector is entitled to vote by
post if he/she appears on the absent voters’ list for the election.
In this situation, he/she is eligible for an absent vote for an indefinite
period or for a particular election. The eligibility depends on
two types of requirements: that the elector is or will be registered
as service voter or that he/she cannot be reasonably expected to
go to the polling station for one of the circumstances contemplated
by the law (blindness or physical incapacity, nature of his/her occupation,
and sea or air travellers, etc.). The system of “postal voting on
demand” was not extended to Northern Ireland.
82. Applications to vote by post must be signed and state an applicant’s
date of birth and national insurance number (or state that he/she
does not have one). The signature, date of birth and national insurance
number on the application must correspond with the information provided
to the Chief Electoral Officer on registration. If the Chief Electoral
Officer is not satisfied with this correspondence, he/she may refuse
to grant an absent vote application. The differences between this
application to vote by post in Northern Ireland and the one described
above (paragraph 36 ff) for the rest of the United Kingdom are:
1. a further information is requested (the national insurance number
or the statement that he/she does not have one); 2. that the information provided
when applying to vote by post is checked against the information
already available at the Electoral Office (since the voter has to
be registered and this information is a requirement to register);
3. the fact that the electoral officer strictly controls that the
information corresponds with the one that appears on the register;
and 4. the need to have a suitable reason for voting by post.
83. The rules for returning the postal ballot in Northern Ireland
are similar to the ones mentioned in paragraph 39. In this case,
those entitled to vote by post must return the ballot paper and
the declaration of identity in the prescribed form, together with
the two envelopes issued by the returning officer (in this case,
the same chief electoral officer). The prescribed form shall include,
as in the case of postal voting for an election held in England
and Wales or Scotland, “provision for the form to be signed and
for stating the date of birth of the elector...”.
Note The elector must put
the completed ballot inside the ballot paper envelope and seal it,
and put the completed declaration of identity and the sealed ballot
paper envelope inside the return envelope.
84. In Northern Ireland, the postal ballot shall be taken to be
duly returned when a. it is
returned in the proper envelope and in the proper time-limit, and
is accompanied by the declaration of identity duly signed, and b. that declaration of identity
states the date of birth of the elector and the returning officer
is satisfied that the date stated corresponds with the date supplied
as the date of the elector’s birth in the register. The declaration
of identity referred shall be taken not to be duly signed unless
the returning officer is satisfied that the signature on the declaration
corresponds with the signature supplied as the elector’s signature
on the register (Rule 45, Schedule 1, Representation of the People
Act 1983). All postal votes in Northern Ireland are checked for
the correct signature and date of birth, rather than the 20% minimum
checked in Great Britain.
85. After the postal ballot is taken to be duly returned, the
returning officer shall mix the postal ballot papers with the ballot
papers from at least one ballot box before counting them (Rule 45
(1A) (a), Schedule 1, Representation of the People Act 1983). This
is also the case in Great Britain.
86. Postal voting in Northern Ireland is of a non-supervised type.
The amendments to this system, introduced in 2002 and 2006, aimed
at eliminating fraud, since the elector eligible to vote by post
must complete an application form with personal information, which
will be checked with the one available on the registers. The claims
about fraud in this kind of remote voting do not seem to have been
directed, however, towards the security or reliability of the postal
service. Thus, the postal voting system seems to fit with the provisions
of the Council of Europe in order to avoid fraud both at the level
of applications and voters’ lists, and at the level of the postal
service.
87. The declaration of identity that the elector must return together
with the postal ballot to the electoral office also aims to prevent
electoral abuses, as the electoral officer has to check that the
elector appears on the postal voting list and that his/her identity
and personal data correspond with the information held in the registers. However,
the principles of secrecy of vote and freedom of expression of Article
3 of Protocol No. 1 to and Article 10 of the European Convention
on Human Rights
Note are
not undermined, given that the ballot paper is inside a separate
sealed envelope, and then placed in the return envelope together
with the declaration of identity. The latter is checked with the
information available in the registers and the postal voting list.
Then, the postal ballots are mixed with the ballots of at least
one ballot box in the polling station, and afterwards opened and counted.
88. Connecting these previous ideas, we can say that some important
measures were introduced in the application for the postal voting
system in Northern Ireland, particularly to eliminate and avoid
fraudulent voting. The returning system also seems to prevent abuses
and to be in line with the principle of secret suffrage.
89. The mechanism of postal voting in Northern Ireland protects
the secrecy and effective exercise of the right to vote when the
elector is not expected to go to the polling station and for that
reason applies to vote by post. The legitimate aim pursued by the
specific requirements concerning postal voting is to avoid the abuses that
this mechanism of voting produced in the past, and to make sure
that the person who applies for the postal ballot and returns it
is really the registered elector. In order to reach this aim, the
Northern Ireland legislation requires the elector to use an application
form provided by the electoral officer that asks for personal data,
and to return the postal ballot with a declaration of identity to
be checked with the information available at the electoral officer’s.
This additional personal data required is a proportionate means
for preventing electoral fraud, and does not obstruct the exercise
of the right to vote by post.
90. On the other hand, the system of postal voting in force in
Great Britain is somewhat similar to the one of Northern Ireland,
since the amendments introduced in 2006. One difference is that
the individual application in Northern Ireland also requires the
national insurance number or the statement that the elector does
not have one, and the fact that for Northern Ireland, for the postal
ballot to be valid the registration officer must, and not just can,
check the data and the signature against the information available
in the electoral office. In Great Britain, only 20% of returned
postal votes are checked for correct personal identifiers. Therefore,
these minor differences in the rules of postal voting in Northern
Ireland can not be considered to affect the equal treatment of their
citizens with respect to the rest of the citizens of the United
Kingdom; on the contrary, these rules of postal voting guarantee
in a better way the principle of free elections, and allow the citizens
exercising their right to vote by post in a more secure and confident
way.
Conclusion
91. In response to the first query
(relating to the voters’ registration system), the introduction
of a rolling registration system throughout the year in addition
to the annual canvass is a positive measure for both increasing
participation in elections and for the accuracy of registers. Regarding
the household system, due to the fact that this system can lead
to inaccuracies and problems of securing the exercise of the individual
right to vote, the Venice Commission would suggest that Great Britain
should advance towards an individual registration system. On the
other hand, the lack of personal identifiers, and the fact that
the system relies on a general belief on the bona fides of citizens
may eventually be a source of inaccuracies from which other vices could
eventually flow. The use of more accurate personal identifiers is
strongly advised. Sanctions are an ex-post mechanism linked to punishing
behaviour, but by themselves, sanctions cannot secure accuracy.
92. In response to the second query (relating to postal voting),
the United Kingdom legislation goes a long way to try to defend
the systems of absent voting, including postal voting, from fraud
and manipulation. The improvements made in this sense with the introduction
of personal identifiers in the postal voting statement are welcomed.
However, some effort is still pending related to the verification
of the personal data provided by the postal voting statement. The
extension of the right to vote by post on demand, where no reason
is required, has to go together with effective anti-fraud measures.
In this respect, the cross checking of 20% of the votes as a precautionary
measure raises questions about its reliability.
93. In answer to the third question (relating to the differences
in legislation between Great Britain and Northern Ireland): the
special requirements for Northern Ireland are justified and fair,
given the special circumstances. In summary, the legislation in
force in Northern Ireland establishes tighter controls for securing the
right to secret and free vote that cannot be considered as an obstacle
for the exercise of this right, but as measures that intend to reduce
fraud and abuses, and to guarantee democratic elections. The differences between
the electoral legislation applicable to Northern Ireland and the
rest of the United Kingdom referred to registration of voters and
postal voting are the result of a number of amendments introduced
by parliament in order to tackle problems of inaccuracies of the
registers and electoral fraud. These abuses, which were linked with
particular social and political circumstances of Northern Ireland,
were of deep concern within the government, the parliament itself,
and other British public authorities (e.g. the Electoral Commission).
The aim of the Electoral Fraud (Northern Ireland) Act 2002, the
Northern Ireland (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2006, and the Electoral
Administration Act 2006 was precisely to include anti-fraud measures
to prevent electoral abuses that could be generated through registration
or postal voting. The arguments exposed above support the opinion
that the difference in the electoral system is not, per se, against
the standards of democratic elections and human rights that bind
the member states of the Council of Europe. In this particular case, moreover,
the different requirements are reasonably justified by the special
historical circumstances of Northern Ireland and by the importance
both of preventing fraud and improving the social perception of elections
as the cornerstone mechanisms for the good functioning of democracy.
Concerning the specific requirements for Northern Ireland implemented
by the electoral law, it can be affirmed that they are also in accordance
with the standards of the Council of Europe. Even more, we could
say that they adjust better to them than the ones that operate in
the rest of the United Kingdom concerning parliamentary elections, especially
in relation with registration. Thus, the continuous individual registration
system complies better with the principles of good practice in electoral
matters and with the European electoral heritage that underlies
them and it could be appropriate to extend it to Great Britain.
The same is true about the postal voting system, on the other hand,
it establishes a procedure of application, returning and checking
of identity and personal data by the electoral officer that tend
to make this electoral mechanism more secure and transparent. In
other words, the legislation in force in Northern Ireland establishes
tighter controls for securing the right to secret and free vote
that cannot be considered as an obstacle for the exercise of this
right, but as measures that intend to reduce fraud and abuses, and
to guarantee democratic elections. Given these stronger controls,
British authorities should perhaps ascertain whether the continuation
of circumstances that called for “justified” absent voting (in opposition
to ‘on demand’ absent voting applied in Great Britain) still remain
in Northern Ireland. If not, the authorities should then explain
why the different treatment of absent voting in Great Britain and Northern
Ireland still remains justifiable and acceptable.