LONDON: Up to eight million people could be denied their right to vote thanks to an “outdated registration system”, the Electoral Commission has said.
The commission has called for “urgent reforms” to electoral registration rules after research published on Monday highlighted the number of people either incorrectly registered or missing from the electoral roll completely.
The figure is more than the combined adult populations of Scotland and Wales and includes disproportionate numbers of young people and private renters.
Only two-thirds of private renters in Britain are registered at their current address, while the proportion of renters in Scotland included on the register has fallen from 49 per cent in 2018 to 45 per cent last year.
Homeowners were much more likely to be correctly registered, with 88 per cent of mortgage-holders and 95 per cent of owner-occupiers appearing on the register at their correct address.
Pensioners were much more likely to be correctly registered than anyone else, with 96 per cent included on the register compared to 60 per cent of those aged 18-19 and 67 per cent of those aged 20-24.
There were also wide ethnic disparities, with 87 per cent of white people correctly registered compared to 80 per cent of Asian people and 72 per cent of black people. The proportion of black people correctly registered has fallen from 75 per cent in 2018.
Craig Westwood, the Electoral Commission’s director of communications, policy and research, said: “Without action, we’ll continue to see large numbers of people unable to take part in elections.
“The electoral community needs a clear plan to ensure that electoral registration processes are modernised so that people are registered and able to exercise their right to vote. As part of this plan, governments will need to pass legislation to enable data to be shared with electoral administrators.”
Changes proposed by the Electoral Commission would allow government departments and public bodies to share data on potentially eligible voters with electoral administrators, allowing them to register voters directly or send voters invitations to register. The commission said this would not only improve the experience for voters, but would also reduce the burden faced by electoral administrators who currently receive high numbers of applications to register in the run-up to major elections.
ROME: The UK has shown “great interest” in Italy’s migrant deal with Albania, Giorgia Meloni said, as Sir Keir...
ISLAMABAD: An Anti-terrorism Court (ATC) in Islamabad on Monday ordered immediate release of all arrested members of...
KARACHI: Balochistan’s minister for local government and rural development Sardar Sarfaraz Chakar Domki passed away...
LONDON: Plans to ban traffic from London’s Oxford Street have been announced by Sadiq Khan.The Labour Mayor of...
LONDON: Disgraced former BBC presenter Huw Edwards has been spared jail after admitting accessing indecent images of...
LONDON: Four young boys died in a fire surrounded by rubbish and human excrement after their mother left them home...
ISLAMABAD: The government and the opposition lawmakers on Monday engaged in a war of words in the National Assembly on...
LONDON: A man who was due to face trial has admitted causing the death of two teenage friends and seriously injuring...