How to vote – and what to do once you’ve voted

Got an election in your area today? Here are a few key pieces of information for you.

Voting in person

  • Polling stations are open between 7am and 10pm today. No votes can be cast after 10pm; it’s not like the shops where being in the queue at closing time is enough.
  • You don’t need your polling card to vote.
  • You have to vote at your local polling station, which is indicated on the card. If you’ve lost your card and aren’t sure where to vote, you can contact your local council.
  • In some parts of the country you’ll be given more than one ballot paper today as, aside from the local elections, there are elections in London for Mayor and Assembly and also referendums on introducing a directly elected Mayor in 10 other places. How many votes you can put on your ballot papers, and using what system(s), varies around the country and may be different from what happened last time you voted. So read the instructions carefully!
  • EU citizens can vote in local elections.

Voting by post

  • Postal ballots can be handed in at polling stations today.
  • Make sure all the paperwork is completed and put inside the (outer) sealed envelope. It is best if you return this to a polling station yourself, but if you can’t make it you can ask someone else you trust to take the sealed envelope to a polling station for you.
  • If you get the paperwork wrong, your postal vote will be invalid. Take extra care over filling in the date field as this is where many mistakes happen.

Other tips

  • If a last minute medical emergency prevents you going to vote, you have until 5pm today to apply for an emergency proxy so that someone else can vote on your behalf. Contact your local council ASAP to arrange this.
  • One point I’ve never heard anyone raise but really, thinking about it, lots of people should ask: it is safe to use the pencils in the voting booths: they are not ordinary pencils, but special indelible pencils – so don’t worry, no-one can erase and alter your vote if use the pencil.

Once you’ve voted…

There’s no better way to encourage someone to vote, and vote Liberal Democrat, than if they see that their friends have also done so. A quick tweet or Facebook update will do the trick:

Finally, though it’s often under-appreciated, days like today are ones that – for all the many disagreements between parties and candidates – we should be proud of.

Tens of thousands of volunteers across the UK are putting in hours from before the crack of dawn until well after dusk in a democracy where elections are run without the sort of political manipulation that disfigures so-called elections in far too many countries. We’re a far better and healthier democracy than the many countries where political activists have to risk life and limb in elections which are then rigged. That’s something to cherish.

So good luck, but extra luck if you’re a Liberal Democrat!

* Mark Pack is Party President and is the editor of Liberal Democrat Newswire.

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This entry was posted in Local government and News.
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2 Comments

  • And you do not have to tell those annoying party workers (of whatever persuasion) outside your number! Some act as if you have to and are quite persistent if you refuse. They can be reported for doing this.

  • @Anne
    I had a stand up row with the Tories outside our polling station last GE for doing this. They did not introduce themselves as Tory activists and framed their request in such a way as it seemed to many (including my wife) to be a requirement.

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