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Quote from: Bentley Bullet on May 05, 2023, 10:32:57 pmQuote from: wilts rover on May 05, 2023, 09:51:13 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on May 05, 2023, 08:02:47 pmTo apply for postal votes, voters must download, print and fill in an application form, which they then send to the electoral services team at their council. Identification is taken from the information declared. How do they know the person who has downloaded and sent off the form is the person whose name is on it?There is no such thing as a perfect solution to fraud, is there?But people are telling me Voter ID is the answer to it? Postal voting has - and always will be - the most likely source of fraud.
Quote from: wilts rover on May 05, 2023, 09:51:13 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on May 05, 2023, 08:02:47 pmTo apply for postal votes, voters must download, print and fill in an application form, which they then send to the electoral services team at their council. Identification is taken from the information declared. How do they know the person who has downloaded and sent off the form is the person whose name is on it?There is no such thing as a perfect solution to fraud, is there?
Quote from: Bentley Bullet on May 05, 2023, 08:02:47 pmTo apply for postal votes, voters must download, print and fill in an application form, which they then send to the electoral services team at their council. Identification is taken from the information declared. How do they know the person who has downloaded and sent off the form is the person whose name is on it?
To apply for postal votes, voters must download, print and fill in an application form, which they then send to the electoral services team at their council. Identification is taken from the information declared.
Quote from: Bentley Bullet on May 05, 2023, 10:30:36 pmQuote from: BillyStubbsTears on May 05, 2023, 09:35:55 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on May 05, 2023, 07:40:05 pm Since 2014, the Electoral Commission has recommended that ID should be required in Great Britain before voters are issued with a ballot paper.In the United Kingdom, the Electoral Commission is the national election commission, created in 2001 as a result of the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000. It is an independent agency that regulates party and election finance and sets standards for how elections should be run.You're right, of course in that you shouldn't have to explain your point. My point is, of course, that I didn't request it. Once again, you entirely miss the point in your insistence on arguing.The issue isn't about whether we should require photo ID to vote. It is about implementing that requirement in a way that is designed to exclude certain groups and aid other groups.But, since you raised the Electoral Commission's view on photo ID, let's follow that up and see where it leads. Their line back in 2014 was that electoral fraud was pretty much insignificant. But.They acknowledged that many voters were convinced that fraud was widespread, and those voters required their confidence in the system to be strengthened.Now, a sensible Government could have gone out of its way to make the point, passionately, convincingly and with support from the evidence, that voter fraud was rarer than rocking horse shite. And that, in a country that has steadfastly rejected the idea of compulsory ID cards, there was no need to have voter ID.Heck, they could even have taken the EC approach and said that voter fraud was negligible, but voter ID was required to underpin voters' confidence in the system.But this one didn't. It pushed the line that voter fraud was so serious that we had to have voter ID. Then it totally ignored criticisms from across the political spectrum that it was rushing through the legislation, that it was not publicising the need for voter ID, that it was not properly funding the process of offering voter ID cards and that it was allowing pensioners to use a plethora of forms of ID, while barring young people from using similar ones.MY insistence on arguing? You've either lost all sense of reality or you're having a laugh, and seeing as there's not much evidence of you possessing a sense of humour I sense you have finally arrived at the former.Let's do this one paragraph at a time so you can't do what you do best - avoid answering questions.If "the issue isn't about whether we should require photo ID to vote", why do you keep making it an issue by saying voter fraud is rare?How do you know it is rare?If, as is reported, it is designed to exclude certain groups, such as senior citizens, doesn't this play into the Labour Party's hands seeing as (according to you) the vast majority of senior citizens support the Tories?1) I know it's rare because the very EC that you so approvingly quoted sat so themselves.2) Read what I wrote. The Tories are making it disproportionately harder for young people, not old people. They have made a string of IDs that many pensioners have (a whole set of travel passes for example) acceptable forms of ID, while refusing to accept young people's travel passes, University or college ID cards etc.3) It's not "according to me" that old people disproportionately vote Tory. It's evidence supported by every poll, every week, month and year.See, I try not to make wild claims unless they can be backed up by evidence. I leave that to people who are more interested in arguing for arguing sake.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on May 05, 2023, 09:35:55 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on May 05, 2023, 07:40:05 pm Since 2014, the Electoral Commission has recommended that ID should be required in Great Britain before voters are issued with a ballot paper.In the United Kingdom, the Electoral Commission is the national election commission, created in 2001 as a result of the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000. It is an independent agency that regulates party and election finance and sets standards for how elections should be run.You're right, of course in that you shouldn't have to explain your point. My point is, of course, that I didn't request it. Once again, you entirely miss the point in your insistence on arguing.The issue isn't about whether we should require photo ID to vote. It is about implementing that requirement in a way that is designed to exclude certain groups and aid other groups.But, since you raised the Electoral Commission's view on photo ID, let's follow that up and see where it leads. Their line back in 2014 was that electoral fraud was pretty much insignificant. But.They acknowledged that many voters were convinced that fraud was widespread, and those voters required their confidence in the system to be strengthened.Now, a sensible Government could have gone out of its way to make the point, passionately, convincingly and with support from the evidence, that voter fraud was rarer than rocking horse shite. And that, in a country that has steadfastly rejected the idea of compulsory ID cards, there was no need to have voter ID.Heck, they could even have taken the EC approach and said that voter fraud was negligible, but voter ID was required to underpin voters' confidence in the system.But this one didn't. It pushed the line that voter fraud was so serious that we had to have voter ID. Then it totally ignored criticisms from across the political spectrum that it was rushing through the legislation, that it was not publicising the need for voter ID, that it was not properly funding the process of offering voter ID cards and that it was allowing pensioners to use a plethora of forms of ID, while barring young people from using similar ones.MY insistence on arguing? You've either lost all sense of reality or you're having a laugh, and seeing as there's not much evidence of you possessing a sense of humour I sense you have finally arrived at the former.Let's do this one paragraph at a time so you can't do what you do best - avoid answering questions.If "the issue isn't about whether we should require photo ID to vote", why do you keep making it an issue by saying voter fraud is rare?How do you know it is rare?If, as is reported, it is designed to exclude certain groups, such as senior citizens, doesn't this play into the Labour Party's hands seeing as (according to you) the vast majority of senior citizens support the Tories?
Quote from: Bentley Bullet on May 05, 2023, 07:40:05 pm Since 2014, the Electoral Commission has recommended that ID should be required in Great Britain before voters are issued with a ballot paper.In the United Kingdom, the Electoral Commission is the national election commission, created in 2001 as a result of the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000. It is an independent agency that regulates party and election finance and sets standards for how elections should be run.You're right, of course in that you shouldn't have to explain your point. My point is, of course, that I didn't request it. Once again, you entirely miss the point in your insistence on arguing.The issue isn't about whether we should require photo ID to vote. It is about implementing that requirement in a way that is designed to exclude certain groups and aid other groups.But, since you raised the Electoral Commission's view on photo ID, let's follow that up and see where it leads. Their line back in 2014 was that electoral fraud was pretty much insignificant. But.They acknowledged that many voters were convinced that fraud was widespread, and those voters required their confidence in the system to be strengthened.Now, a sensible Government could have gone out of its way to make the point, passionately, convincingly and with support from the evidence, that voter fraud was rarer than rocking horse shite. And that, in a country that has steadfastly rejected the idea of compulsory ID cards, there was no need to have voter ID.Heck, they could even have taken the EC approach and said that voter fraud was negligible, but voter ID was required to underpin voters' confidence in the system.But this one didn't. It pushed the line that voter fraud was so serious that we had to have voter ID. Then it totally ignored criticisms from across the political spectrum that it was rushing through the legislation, that it was not publicising the need for voter ID, that it was not properly funding the process of offering voter ID cards and that it was allowing pensioners to use a plethora of forms of ID, while barring young people from using similar ones.
Since 2014, the Electoral Commission has recommended that ID should be required in Great Britain before voters are issued with a ballot paper.In the United Kingdom, the Electoral Commission is the national election commission, created in 2001 as a result of the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000. It is an independent agency that regulates party and election finance and sets standards for how elections should be run.You're right, of course in that you shouldn't have to explain your point. My point is, of course, that I didn't request it.
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on May 05, 2023, 02:33:27 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on May 05, 2023, 08:11:36 amA standard application for a citizen card costs £15 and takes up to 21 days.Wolfie, I doubt very, VERY much that everyone who tried to cheat at the last GE was caught, and I'd bet my starboard knacker that there were certainly more than 4 people who tried to! Eligibility to vote is a universal right. Not something you should have to pay for. You want prople to produce photo ID? Provide it to them for free.https://www.gov.uk/apply-for-photo-id-voter-authority-certificateThere you go Glyn
Quote from: Bentley Bullet on May 05, 2023, 08:11:36 amA standard application for a citizen card costs £15 and takes up to 21 days.Wolfie, I doubt very, VERY much that everyone who tried to cheat at the last GE was caught, and I'd bet my starboard knacker that there were certainly more than 4 people who tried to! Eligibility to vote is a universal right. Not something you should have to pay for. You want prople to produce photo ID? Provide it to them for free.
A standard application for a citizen card costs £15 and takes up to 21 days.Wolfie, I doubt very, VERY much that everyone who tried to cheat at the last GE was caught, and I'd bet my starboard knacker that there were certainly more than 4 people who tried to!
Quote from: Ldr on May 05, 2023, 02:39:58 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on May 05, 2023, 02:33:27 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on May 05, 2023, 08:11:36 amA standard application for a citizen card costs £15 and takes up to 21 days.Wolfie, I doubt very, VERY much that everyone who tried to cheat at the last GE was caught, and I'd bet my starboard knacker that there were certainly more than 4 people who tried to! Eligibility to vote is a universal right. Not something you should have to pay for. You want prople to produce photo ID? Provide it to them for free.https://www.gov.uk/apply-for-photo-id-voter-authority-certificateThere you go GlynSome people might have missed that LDR.It is there though, free to anyone.
Quote from: drfchound on May 06, 2023, 09:18:07 pmQuote from: Ldr on May 05, 2023, 02:39:58 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on May 05, 2023, 02:33:27 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on May 05, 2023, 08:11:36 amA standard application for a citizen card costs £15 and takes up to 21 days.Wolfie, I doubt very, VERY much that everyone who tried to cheat at the last GE was caught, and I'd bet my starboard knacker that there were certainly more than 4 people who tried to! Eligibility to vote is a universal right. Not something you should have to pay for. You want prople to produce photo ID? Provide it to them for free.https://www.gov.uk/apply-for-photo-id-voter-authority-certificateThere you go GlynSome people might have missed that LDR.It is there though, free to anyone.Anyone who knows about it hound. Not all of the country reads this forum. And not all of this forum reads Off Topic posts.If the government wants people to have ID to vote - then they need to give people that ID.
Quote from: Ldr on May 05, 2023, 02:39:58 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on May 05, 2023, 02:33:27 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on May 05, 2023, 08:11:36 amA standard application for a citizen card costs £15 and takes up to 21 days.Wolfie, I doubt very, VERY much that everyone who tried to cheat at the last GE was caught, and I'd bet my starboard knacker that there were certainly more than 4 people who tried to! Eligibility to vote is a universal right. Not something you should have to pay for. You want prople to produce photo ID? Provide it to them for free.https://www.gov.uk/apply-for-photo-id-voter-authority-certificateThere you go GlynSome people might have missed that LDR.It is there though, free to anyone.
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on May 05, 2023, 02:33:27 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on May 05, 2023, 08:11:36 amA standard application for a citizen card costs £15 and takes up to 21 days.Wolfie, I doubt very, VERY much that everyone who tried to cheat at the last GE was caught, and I'd bet my starboard knacker that there were certainly more than 4 people who tried to! Eligibility to vote is a universal right. Not something you should have to pay for. You want prople to produce photo ID? Provide it to them for free.https://www.gov.uk/apply-for-photo-id-voter-authority-certificateThere you go Glyn
Quote from: Bentley Bullet on May 05, 2023, 08:11:36 amA standard application for a citizen card costs £15 and takes up to 21 days.Wolfie, I doubt very, VERY much that everyone who tried to cheat at the last GE was caught, and I'd bet my starboard knacker that there were certainly more than 4 people who tried to! Eligibility to vote is a universal right. Not something you should have to pay for. You want prople to produce photo ID? Provide it to them for free.
A standard application for a citizen card costs £15 and takes up to 21 days.Wolfie, I doubt very, VERY much that everyone who tried to cheat at the last GE was caught, and I'd bet my starboard knacker that there were certainly more than 4 people who tried to!
Its designed to put people off voting because they know that young people won't vote for Tories.
An OAP with Oyster Card in London is deemed to have qualifying I'dA person with an 18 to 25 Oyster Card is deemed to NOT have qualifying I'd
I agree with Jacob Rees-Mogg on this: -"We upset a system that worked perfectly well. It was done on trust, and the system worked. If there's any problem in our system, it's with postal votes, which don't require voter ID.""No evidence that personation [the crime of voter fraud at the ballot box] was a serious problem. There have been hardly any prosecutions or even any complaints in this country over decades."He's absolutely right. He's also correct in saying this is gerrymandering i.e. it is an attempt to boost the Tories election chances.I have no evidence that he's correct in saying it actually harmed the Tories in the local elections. Rationally this sounds wrong.But credit to him for calling it out. I also agree with him that Labour's prospective policy on allowing non-UK citizens to vote in General Elections is also gerrymandering and wrong as well.There's not much respect for democracy at the top levels of our 2 main political parties sadly.
https://twitter.com/LiveFromBrexit/status/1658088580772659201Branton.Rees-Mogg is saying that the Voter ID measures were consciously chosen because it was believed they would benefit the Tory party. His criticism of them now is not that that was a morally wrong position to take. It's that (he says, although he has zero evidence to support this) that they hurt the Tories.If he had any concept of morality, he'd have resigned from the Cabinet rather than stand up in Parliament and support what he apparently knew was a deliberate attempt to suppress anti-Tory votes.
TBF he was in the Cabinet at the time.Not every member of the Cabinet will agree with every single individual decision/law being made but they have to come together under collective responsibility otherwise Government can't operate.
Branton.Have you watched that video I posted, where Rees-Mogg stood up in Parliament eloquently explaining why Voter ID was necessary, and berating "socialists who don't have confidence in the voters" for arguing against it. All of which says to me that, correct as he might be in saying what he says now, he doesn't deserve plaudits for it. He thought he was supporting a law that was going to help his side. Now he's flipped 180 degrees. Ignoring that context isn't a sign of intellectual maturity.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on May 16, 2023, 08:30:39 pmBranton.Have you watched that video I posted, where Rees-Mogg stood up in Parliament eloquently explaining why Voter ID was necessary, and berating "socialists who don't have confidence in the voters" for arguing against it. All of which says to me that, correct as he might be in saying what he says now, he doesn't deserve plaudits for it. He thought he was supporting a law that was going to help his side. Now he's flipped 180 degrees. Ignoring that context isn't a sign of intellectual maturity.It seems that it is ok for Starmer to change his mind as often as he wants but not for Mogg to do so.Now is that double standards.That last sentence by Branton two posts ago appears to be very insightful.
Branton.Have you watched that video I posted, where Rees-Mogg stood up in Parliament eloquently explaining why Voter ID was necessary, and berating "socialists who don't have confidence in the voters" for arguing against it. All of which says to me that, correct as he might be in saying what he says now, he doesn't deserve plaudits for it. He thought he was supporting a law that was going to help his side. Now he's flipped 180 degrees. Ignoring that context isn't a sign of intellectual maturity.