Gould Review on Scottish Elections Published

Jason Kitcat, 24 October 2007

The Electoral Commission and the separate review by Ron Gould that the Commission instituted have published their reports on the Scottish elections of May 2007

The Gould Review in particular identifies a number of important issues, many of which ORG addressed in our own report on the elections published this June.

While the Review makes a number of positive, but minor, recommendations regarding electronic counting, it unfortunately fails to address the security and technical issues encountered by ORG observers. It seems that once again a lack of technical expertise has led an elections report team to focus on other matters at the expense of important issues regarding the security, accuracy and auditability of e-voting and e-counting systems. Whilst building trust in e-counting systems is mooted, the obvious method of using sample manual recounts to check the accuracy of electronic counts is not once mentioned.

While ORG remains unaware of any plans to introduce e-voting in Scotland, the Review states that:

"We strongly recommend against introducing electronic voting for the 2011 elections, until the electronic counting problems that were evidenced during the 2007 elections are resolved."

We welcome this caution but it raises questions about moves that Gould may be aware of that we aren't!

The Review overall concludes that there was too much emphasis on completing counts quickly and this, along with managerial failings and politically-motivated decisions by ministers led to 'voters [being] overlooked as the most important stakeholders to be considered at every stage of the election.' ORG welcomes the Review's repeated emphasis on conducting accurate and high-quality counts over speedy counts. However it's notable that the Review lacks the kind of strong language which will encourage rapid action on the problems noted. The Review notes that:

"... we have had no intention of -- and, in fact, have scrupulously sought to avoid -- assigning blame to individuals and institutions or questions the legitimacy of the 3 May 2007 elections results."

Given this perspective it's difficult to see how the Review could have come to any strong conclusions that would force political action. By avoiding the question of the results' legitimacy the Gould Review has abdicated itself from an important responsibility. ORG expressed doubts over the results, as did others, and yet the Review we've all been made to wait for dodges the issue.

Comment

Reply #2 on : Wed October 24, 2007, 16:38:59
[...] 2 Jason Kitcat has summarised the Open Rights Group response here, noting that the Review …unfortunately fails to address the security and technical issues [...]
Comment

Reply #1 on : Thu November 15, 2007, 11:41:06
[...] the Committee to examine how voters’ interests can be protected, following the publication of the Gould Review into the Scottish elections in [...]

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