Ballot Act 1872

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Ballot Act 1872
Relates to
Status: Repealed
Text of statute as originally enacted

The Ballot Act 1872

hustings system of nomination and election in Britain.[5]

Background

Employers and landowners had been able to use their sway over employees and tenants to influence the vote, either by being present themselves or by sending representatives to check on the votes as they were being cast. Small retailers were also concerned not to upset their bigger customers by voting differently from them. Radicals, such as the

Chartists, had long campaigned for the system to end by the introduction of a secret ballot.[6][7]

The

Edward Aldam Leatham, the husband of Bright's sister, to introduce the Ballot Act on leave.[8]

Many in

]

Election spending at the time was unlimited, and many voters would take bribes from both sides. While the secret ballot might have had some effect in reducing corruption in British politics, the Corrupt and Illegal Practices Prevention Act 1883 formalised the position and is seen by many[who?] to have been the key legislation in the attempts to end electoral corruption.

The Ballot Act, in combination with the Municipal Elections Act 1875[10] and the Parliamentary Elections (Returning Officers) Act 1875,[11] is considered to have ushered in today's electoral practices.[2]

Effects

The secret ballot mandated by the Act was first used on

Pontefract museum.[12] Of those who voted, 16%, were illiterate, and special arrangements had to be made to record their previously-open oral votes.[13]

The first general election using a secret ballot was in 1874, which saw the first Conservative majority elected since 1841.

The Ballot Act 1872 was of particular importance in Ireland, as it enabled tenants to vote against the landlord class in parliamentary elections. The principal result of the Act was seen in the general election of 1880, which marked the end of a landlord interest in both Ireland and Great Britain.[14]

Although the ballot in the UK is routinely characterized as "secret" the fact that ballot papers are numbered, and that the voter's electoral roll identifier is written on its identically numbered counterfoil by the officer issuing the ballot to the voter at the voting station, means that in principle the identity of a voter can be linked to the ballot they cast.[15]

Abroad

The Act inspired Belgian minister Jules Malou to implement a similar system in Belgium, which he did with the act of 9 July 1877 (la loi du 9 juillet 1877 sur le secret du vote et les fraudes électorales).[16] The elections of 1878 were a victory for the Liberal Party.[citation needed]

See also

References

Further reading

  • Woodall, Robert. "The Ballot Act of 1872" History Today (July 1974), Vol. 24 Issue 7, pp 464–471 online.