#IMadeMyMark: Spoiling to have your say

All that you need to know about spoilt votes, and what they mean in the elections.

SPOILT ballots, by their definition, are votes which cannot be counted since the voter’s intention is unclear.

According to the IEC, the rules governing voting determine how and when votes are not counted: if voters have not clearly made their choice on their ballot.

According to statistics reported on in the media, the percentage of spoilt votes since 1994 has fluctuated with less than one percent of the total vote in 1994 having been counted as spoiled, 1,55 per cent in the 1999 elections, 1,58 per cent in the 2004 elections and a small decline of 1,34 per cent in the 2009 election statistics.

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Whether there is a difference between voters who don’t turn out at the polls on election day, and spoiled ballots was rather confusingly described by the IEC on its Facebook page shortly before the last election:

“A spoilt or invalid vote is accounted for in the reconciliation of ballot papers in each voting station. but has no bearing on the aggregation of valid votes. Thus, for the person who casts a ballot that is ultimately deemed as invalid, the weight of the effort is the same as that of a person who has not turned out to vote regardless of whether such a person has registered to vote or not.”

A valid ballot paper is one which reflects the intentions of the voter unambiguously. Conversely, a vote is defined as “spoilt” or “invalid” if the counting official is unable to clearly determine the intention of the voter.”

 

 

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