There is concern on an unprecedented scale that widespread electoral fraud is being perpetrated in today’s election. The police have launched at least 50 enquiries, with 28 claims of major abuse in twelve London boroughs alone.
Large numbers of people enrolled on the electoral registers just days before the deadline for postal voting and examples of unrealistic increases in the population of some individual households abound. One house in Tower Hamlets is, according to the register, said to be inhabited by eighteen single men. The people that do genuinely live there have no idea who they are. In another house where a Labour candidate lives with his young family seven adults have suddenly been added to the electoral role for that address.
A study by the Council of Europe in 2008 said that our voting system was open to widespread fraud as it was “childishly simple” to add bogus names to the register and postal voting provides the anonymity to carry out these frauds without detection.
The cause? Labour’s insistence – against advice – to introduce postal voting for anybody that wanted it in 2004. Prior to that a voter had to have a genuine reason for requiring a postal vote. My own view is that before any attempt to reform the electoral system is made, all parties need to consider the implications of these allegations. The simplest way to avoid such a scandal is to revert to the previous system of postal votes only for those in genuine need of one.
And to answer your question, the Commonwealth has sent a team of election monitors to scrutinise today’s results.