Arts & Literature2 mins ago
why pencil?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The pencils used in polling stations are not ordinary pencils. They are a special type of indelible pencil which cannot be rubbed out. Thay were designed specifically for the purpose, in order to prevent the type of fraud you are worried about.
If a voter accidentally makes a mistake about which candidate they are voting for, they are allowed to scribble out the first cross and put a second cross beside the correct candidate - as long as it is clear that the voter is intending to vote for the candidate with the X rather than the one with the scribble.
It doesn't even matter if you make extra marks on the ballot paper, as long as you
(a) don't sign the ballot paper or otherwise identify yourself
(b) don't vote for more than 1 candidate
(c) don't make it so that it is unclear who you want to vote for.
A tick or a smily face would be just as valid as a cross.
A list of "no" beside all the candidates' names would still be OK as a valid vote, as long as there is also a "yes" or a tick or cross for one of them.
There were several examples of all of these types of ballot paper at the count during the night; we spent a long time studying them carefully because the result was extremely close and we had three re-counts. The main question to ask in each case is "are the intentions of the voter clear?" If yes, then any squiggly stuff is allowed.