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POSTAL VOTING FRAUD
Police
have launched an investigation into allegations of
electoral fraud in last May's local elections. A police
spokesman said the investigation centred around the use
of postal votes in the Arboretum ward and followed a
complaint from the public. It comes after Labour
councillor Abdul Rehman, who lost his seat, raised
concerns over the use of postal votes. City councillors
and the returning officer Michael Foote are expected to
be interviewed to gather evidence.
The police spokesman said, "We are investigating
allegations of electoral fraud in the local elections in
May following a complaint from a member of the public. We
are looking at various postal votes in particular. The
investigation is at an early stage. We will be
interviewing various people connected with the city
council like the returning officer, various councillors,
council staff and potentially voters, anybody who may be
connected with this complaint."
Following the election Abdul Rehman, who lost his seat to
Liberal Democrat Rehmat Khan, claimed that hours before
the deadline for postal votes, on 18 April, 200 postal
voting forms were delivered to the council office. The
investigation into possible electoral fraud was later
dropped. Derbyshire police said that no evidence of fraud
was found in the city's Arboretum ward following a
nine-month probe.(Source: BBC News, Nov/06)
The
Government has performed a complete climbdown on the
dangers of postal voting fraud by rushing through urgent
reforms in time for next years local elections.
Sweeping new security measures to prevent scandals will
be announced in the Queens Speech. The electoral
roll will be made more reliable by requiring everybody to
provide their signature and a code number, such as their
date of birth, before they can vote. Political parties
would be prevented from collecting postal vote
applications, as the Conservatives and Labour did in
marginal constituencies in the general election. A new
offence of fraudulently applying for a postal vote would
carry a maximum penalty of two years imprisonment, an
unlimited fine and a ban on standing for public office or
voting.
The changes reflect an astonishing U-turn. As the
election campaign started, Tony Blair claimed that postal
voting was no more prone to fraud than other systems. The
movement for change began with an investigation by The
Times which found widespread claims of cheating and
intimidation in postal voting in local and European
elections. The independent Electoral Reform Society
welcomed the changes. Wonderful, wonderful,
thats just exactly as it should be, Ken
Ritchie, its chief executive, said. I am sure that
the way The Times highlighted this was very
important.
The reforms tackle postal voting fraud and also
small-scale identity fraud in polling booths. Richard
Mawrey, QC, an election commissioner, castigated
politicians last month when he found six Birmingham
Labour councillors guilty of postal-vote rigging. One was
later cleared on appeal. The deputy High Court judge made
a devastating critique of weaknesses in the system. In a
withering passage of his 192-page judgment, he said that
the Government had accused critics of scare- mongering.
The Governments attitude indicates a state
not simply of complacency but of denial, he said.
Ministers and civil servants spent 24 hours wondering how
to respond to an unexpectedly damning report. It was too
late to change anything: the Prime Minister was calling a
general election the following day. Nick Raynsford, the
Local Governmment Minister at the time, went to
Parliament and accused the judge of making inferences
without any evidence. Mr Raynsford stood down in the
post-election reshuffle and the electoral reform
portfolio has been given to Harriet Harman, Minister of
State in the Department for Constitutional Affairs. At a
press conference, Lord Falconer of Thoroton, the Lord
Chancellor, repeatedly praised Mr Mawreys report,
saying that it had raised problems that the Government
would now tackle.
The biggest concession is to require everybody to sign
before they can get on to the electoral roll. Elections
officers will then have a record of signatures to compare
with documents accompanying postal votes. Voters will
also have to supply a code which could be their date of
birth or national insurance number. These security
methods could also be introduced in polling stations.
This falls short of the demand for individual
registration. Ministers fear that if everybody in a
household had to complete a separate form, some people
would be disenfranchised. The one area that is ignored is
intimidation. The Electoral Commission has asked the
Government to introduce a law of undue influence over
postal voting but this has been excluded. (Source: Times Online)
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