Now if the 'Vote Nobody' campaign wants to claim all the normal spoiled ballot papers as deliberate, or even a slight increase, then that still equates to the biggest electoral fraud in history, and i have to point out that campaign wasn't active or supported up here. This is worse than Florida 2000 where so many blacks were denied their vote. A politician yesterday said the UN should be involved in future Scottish elections - I second that. And let's have some peacekeepers on the streets to stop Labour politicans like Tom McCabe physically attacking SNP supporters. This is definitely a Labour party fraud - their minister commissioned this, their Lord sat as directors on the company that misrun it, and yet they still lost it and have the audacity to mount legal actions against their loss. it comes in the context of hundreds of thousands of postal votes missing, and first hand witness reports of people being denied their votes despite registering before the deadline.
And you know, apart from showing up the blatant corruptness of the Labour party, it also highlights their incompetence. They rig an election, get caught, and still don't win. And there is a simple reason for that - they tried to shaft the opposition but shafted their own voters more. At the polling station I attended there was a Labour party supporter there only during the busy periods, and he was only spouting propaganda and handing out propaganda. Throughout the day, I was there with the candidate I was supporting and with up to two other supporters. We weren't spouting propaganda, we were explaining the voting system and handing out leaflets explaining how to vote but even by walking towards voters I only had ten seconds or so to explain the system. Which is more than they got from the sole council employee inside the polling station. People who didn't support the SNP walked by us and so wouldn't have known how to vote. And I hate to say this, but nyone still voting labour in Scotland has to be below average IQ. At least 50% of the people I asked admitted not understanding how to vote, the BBC reports an election worker elsewhere reporting 60%. Now I will be collecting testimony from people who wanted to vote SNP but were denied the right to vote, and who tried to vote SNP but think they made a mistake, cos this will drag on.
To be honest, I found it easy to vote but I am an arrogant yet smart bastard, I just don't accept the argument you have to pass an IQ test to express a democratic choice. Equal rights for idiots, same rules apply.
Comments
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oxymoron
09.05.2007 12:15
given that the SNP and every other major party signed off on the ballot papers i'd say it shows them all in the same light...
Fod
single transferrable vote
09.05.2007 15:26
emigre
Dan the dunderheid
09.05.2007 17:17
Sorry Emigre, it must be confusing for you abroad - it obviously is here. There were three votes. The first vote was for a local councillor, and you could rank the candidates one to eight. Although you had to use numerals. You may think 'of course you use numerals' but you shouldn't. You might think it is obvious that you list your favourite candidate as number one and the rest in descending orde, but you shouldn't. Plus multiple party coucillors could be elected in each ward and would have to decide among themselves who was to be recommended for number one, who for number two etc. And each party would be recommending different votes in their literature of course. That was on one sheet of paper.
The second vote was a straight 'first past the post' constituency vote for a local MSP, marked with an X.
The third vote was for list candidate MSPs - candidates who are voted for across a region of constituencies, and who get elected in a complicated system according to how many of their party members were elected in the constituency votes combined with how many votes they actually received. Also marked with an X. Many people put two X's in the same column or descending numbers in the wrong sheet. Now to complicate matters further the same candidate can run as a list MSP and as a constituency MSP, and the parties can call themselves whatever they want. So for instance, in Gordon, the electorate would have seen 'Alex Salmond for First Minister SNP' which was the name the SNP ran under, which would have been their list vote. Then in the next column they would have seen 'Alex Salmond SNP' which was their constituency vote. Both marked with an X in each column.
I know you are smarter than me but it still feels like explaining the off-side rule to a blind and deaf American who has never heard of Soccer, I have tried in vain to simplify it for you to save my own sanity. Now try explaining that to a Scottish punter in 10 seconds or less !
Basically, there are different versions of STV, and the version here requires about 5.8% of the vote and have the wind blowing in the right direction to get elected. To be honest I don't understand that part and haven't found anyone who does. The more constituency votes you get, the less list votes you get - something like that ?!
The list vote which was previously called the 'second vote' was actually put first on the two column MSP sheet presumably to boost it's importance and stop people voting tactically with it, which is part of the reason the Greens lost votes since they only ran list candidates as it was too expensive to stand in every constituency. Traditionally the minor parties here only asked for people to vote for them as 'their second vote' after a voters main choice, and most people voted for two different parties just to show what nice, balanced people they are. This time if these voters voted in the second column - a first past the post constituency vote - their vote would have been wasted if it was even counted. Add to that the polarising nature of this election as a straight two-way fight between Labour and the SNP, and the miscounted votes and lost postal ballots, and I think the Scottish Greens did well to hold onto two MSPs, incidentally their best known MSPs - Harper is their nominal 'leader' and Harvie writes a column for the Big Issue which is widely read. The SSP had a similar amount of MSPs but disintegrated when they split into two parties accrimoniously. On the positive side this also robbed the BNP of a credible chance of taking a Glasow list seat.
All the parties were free to change their names which didn't help. The Labour party became the Scottish Labour party, which is straightforward enough and obviously designed to distance themselves from Blair. More controversially, the SNP became 'Alex Salmond for First Minister SNP'. This was obviously for three reasons, to boost individual candidates chances by associating them with a very popular leader, to disassociate themselves from the BNP whose symbol was a thistle, and to get their name higher up the list of candidates which were listed alphabetically. And up here we had about 30 candidates per list, which is good for democracy but can't have helped the voters.
So who did most people want to vote for ? We have no idea. Who tried to rig the election ? Labour. Who got in ? The SNP in a minority government that will struggle to pass any legislation.
It's still more democratic than England.
Danny
Nut. Still got it wrong.
09.05.2007 20:01
"It was perfectly simple..." "If you don't know how to vote then you shouldn't be voting"... Yeah, right. Just under 142000 people disagree. It makes me think, how many people whose votes were counted managed to do it by blind luck or through blindly following party instructions. I've been conducting follow up polls today. Far fewer people think they misvoted than actully misvoted, only about 1% think they may have misvoted or deliberately spoiled thier papers. So most people who misvoted don't even know that they spoiled their ballot papers. It couldn't have been designed worse.
Emigre, check the posts I hope will be hidden. You can probably figure out for them the answer to your questions.
Danny
How dare they!
10.05.2007 08:37
QUESTION - with 2 votes on parliamentary ballot - if you 'spoil' one vote on say the constituency part but vote 'correctly' on the list system does your 'good' vote count or go down the pan with the other?
How can anyone begin talks about forming a government with so many votes discounted - and how will they deal with 'voter apathy' in the future when you take the time to turn out to vote only to find that you don't know if your vote is even counted?
voter
manually adjusted and adjudicated
10.05.2007 12:34
Initial TV reports suggested that was the case but it seems that wasn't the case. A wrong vote in one column would have flagged up the paper to be "manually adjusted and adjudicated" ( I am uncomfortable with that phrase, it conjurs up the 'Outer Limits' ) . In my constituency and the neighboring constituency 23,000 ballots had to be "manually adjusted and adjudicated" although there were 'only' 6662 spoiled ballots.
The trouble is most of the spoiled parliamentary ballots had two crosses in the first column and none in the second, or vice versa, so obviously neither vote would count. And more than 25,000 people only voted in one of the columns, effectively throwing away a vote. And many people used numerals on the parliamentary sheet and even more used crosses on the council sheet, though that is just anectdotal, I don't have figures for that. The Electoral Commission predicted this would cause voter confusion nine months ago but still went ahead regardless.
"How can anyone begin talks about forming a government with so many votes discounted - and how will they deal with 'voter apathy' in the future when you take the time to turn out to vote only to find that you don't know if your vote is even counted?"
Voter turnout in my area was 52%, which amazingly is up 17% from the last election. It is pretty obvious why the SNP claim victory anyway, as it was Douglas Alexander, the Labour Scottish secretary who commissioned it - Holyroods elections are still decided in Westminster. Sure, all the parties signed it off but that was presumably to avoid the bad press if they had quibbled or delyed the election. There had been talk of delying the election so prisoners could get the vote the same as in the rest of Europe but that was glossed over. Salmond took the initiative straightaway in his first speech after winning saying he wouldn't rely on the Electoral Commission review but would have a full, independent judicial inquiry. I can't see this fiasco being repeated, it is an international embarrassment. I'll be writing to every SNP MSP and local party urging them to scrap computerised voting. I can't see DRS getting awarded anymore UK voting contracts, they never should have with Neil Kinnock on their board.
"There is nothing wrong with your voting machine. Do not attempt to adjust the government. We are controlling transmission. We will control the horizontal. We will control the vertical. We can roll the image; make it flutter. We can change the focus to a soft blur or sharpen it to crystal clarity. For the next four years, sit quietly and we will control all that you see and hear. We repeat: there is nothing wrong with your voting machine. You are about to participate in a great adventure. You are about to experience the awe and mystery which reaches from the inner mind to the outer limits."
Danny
Calls fro Douglas Alexander to resign
10.05.2007 23:43
Danny
Homepage: http://politics.guardian.co.uk/scotland/story/0,,2075072,00.html