By Jo Best, 24 October 2008 15:50
NEWS
As the US gets ready to head to the polls, the UK government is making its own electoral plans - plans that won't involve e-voting.
In a written answer to Parliament, MP Michael Wills, minister of state for the Ministry of Justice, said there are no plans to embrace e-voting in the short term.
"The government do not plan to introduce e-voting for the 2009 European or local elections," he said.
E-voting, however, hasn't been ruled out totally: Wills hinted that further trials of the technology could be on the way in the future.
"The way forward more generally on e-voting will be informed by the valuable experience gained from earlier pilots, analysis of the responses to the election day consultation, and further development work including the possible further testing of e-voting solutions in non-statutory elections," he said.
According to Wills, no budget for testing has been allocated and any funding for further pilots will come from budgets already earmarked for electoral reform.
He added: "The government are currently taking stock of the previous work on remote e-voting, including the experience gained in earlier pilots, and the responses to the consultation on election day, to inform the way forward."
While the UK may still be adopting a wait and see approach to e-voting, other countries are going full steam ahead, with Estonia recently allowing citizens to cast their ballots over the web.
However, controversy has dogged electronic voting in the UK, with observers at a trial of the tech in last year's local elections revealing they had "serious concerns" about such a system after seeing it at work.
Officially accredited election observers the Open Rights Group, who attended the May 2007 pilot, said in a report: "Inadequate attention was given to system design, systems access and audit trails. Systems used both inappropriate hardware and software, and were insufficiently secured."
The Electoral Commission has also advised the government to put a hold on e-voting pilots.


Comments
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1. Karen Challinor
thats right, lets avoid anything that makes voting easier, after all the electorate might suffer a sudden rush of blood to the head and vote for the wrong party if it were made as simple as pressing a button
plus we might get the idea that voting is a good thing and demand a say a bit more often or even, horror of horrors, demand the right to ask for a general election when the electorate wants it rather than when the government of the day thinks it is going to win (or more likely when it has run out of time and has no more choice but to have an election)
after all low turnouts at the polls have done nothing but good haven't they, low turnouts are why when 80% of the country wanted someone else in charge labour still won with only 20% of the total populations vote
forget electoral reform, it isn't in the governments interests, so it isn't going to happen
2. anon
Of course they're not going to go for e-voting any time soon. After all, it's taken them years to work out how to fudge postal vote results........