Was linked to the
Vote None website yesterday, which I read with interest because none of the parties available to me particularly appeal, and I've spoiled my ballot previously as a protest (rather than not voting). However, under their
Protest Votes Count page, they unfortunately link to the Electoral Commission guidelines which go completely contrary to their point on how protest votes would be counted.
[quote=Vote None]
The Electoral Commission's
guide for those who count the votes requires that
rejected votes be classified and counted under four reasons for rejection:
- absence of official mark [polling station stamp];
- voting for more than one candidate;
- writing or mark by which the voter could be identified;
- unmarked or void for uncertainty.
The examples given include a protest vote (below) where the voter has written 'None of the Above' with a tick. The advice is to classify it as '
voter's intention uncertain'.
[...]
To establish a right to say '
no' in UK elections,
protest votes must be clear beyond dispute, and multiply in number.
Ensure your protest vote is clear
- Don't put a cross (or tick) anywhere.
- Don't write anything else which could identify you, or create any uncertainty or excuse.
- Just put
a single line through all the boxes.
Write
NONE across the ballot paper, so that your intention is clear beyond dispute.
It will then be
indefensible to classify it as 'voter's intention uncertain'.[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=Electoral Commission (emphasis mine)]3.24 The key question an (Acting) Returning Officer should ask is whether the voter has, on the face of the paper, indicated
a reasonably clear intention to vote for a candidate.[/quote]
So even if you make your intention to vote for
no candidate clear beyond dispute, it is still counted as void for uncertainty. So... yeah, I won't be doing that this time.
I'd urge anyone thinking about a protest "no vote" to vote for a candidate instead.