Colonel Mustard
Well-known member
- Jun 18, 2023
- 2,240
I have no problem with the principle of showing ID —why would I? — though there were some anomalies that need ironing out eg accepting certain types of photo ID but not others that seemed equivalent.
In the May elections, the BBC monitored a couple of polling stations in Essex if i remember rightly. Can’t recall the exact figures but there were approximately 150 people who’d been turned away for not having ID, about 120 of whom returned later with the correct ID. There was consternation expressed about the 'disenfranchised' 30 voters who didn’t return. I remember wondering at the time whether those 30, or some of them at least, hadn’t returned because they were voting fraudulently — but this possibility wasn’t even considered by the report I heard. It was assumed they were all bona fide voters who’d been forced to forego their democratic right.
When I was a student, living in a house with 4 others, I remember us voting on behalf of 2 of the guys who were away (they’d asked us to). At least one of them was also registered at home as I remember him feeling pleased that he’d voted twice against Thatcher in the same election. So not only had we committed fraud but had double-voted. Of course no one felt that they were doing anything wrong. We were merely doing our bit to try to keep at bay the running dogs of capitalism. It was pretty benign stuff among consenting adults but it showed just how easy it was to vote fraudulently, and more than once, so on balance the need to show ID seems sensible to me.
In the May elections, the BBC monitored a couple of polling stations in Essex if i remember rightly. Can’t recall the exact figures but there were approximately 150 people who’d been turned away for not having ID, about 120 of whom returned later with the correct ID. There was consternation expressed about the 'disenfranchised' 30 voters who didn’t return. I remember wondering at the time whether those 30, or some of them at least, hadn’t returned because they were voting fraudulently — but this possibility wasn’t even considered by the report I heard. It was assumed they were all bona fide voters who’d been forced to forego their democratic right.
When I was a student, living in a house with 4 others, I remember us voting on behalf of 2 of the guys who were away (they’d asked us to). At least one of them was also registered at home as I remember him feeling pleased that he’d voted twice against Thatcher in the same election. So not only had we committed fraud but had double-voted. Of course no one felt that they were doing anything wrong. We were merely doing our bit to try to keep at bay the running dogs of capitalism. It was pretty benign stuff among consenting adults but it showed just how easy it was to vote fraudulently, and more than once, so on balance the need to show ID seems sensible to me.