87
Polling Process Understanding the Polling Process or How to Bersih-kan elections

Understanding the polling process

  • Upload
    ssmc

  • View
    513

  • Download
    5

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

This session was facilitated by Dr Ng Oon Ee, to help us better understand the role of PACA and also to familiarise voters on the procedures on polling day.

Citation preview

Page 1: Understanding the polling process

Polling Process

Understanding the Polling Process

or

How to Bersih-kan elections

Page 2: Understanding the polling process

Sources

●  www.hannahyeoh.com

Page 3: Understanding the polling process

Scope

Only covers ●  The actual voting process on election day ●  PACA Does NOT cover ●  Postal voting ●  Pre/post election bribery ●  Legally registered 'unqualified' voters ●  Election Observers

Page 4: Understanding the polling process

PACA

Polling Agent / Counting Agent (PACA) ●  Job: to ensure free and fair elections without:-

–  Multiple voting –  Voting of non-qualified voters –  'Phantom' voting –  Ballot stuffing

●  in EVERY voting stream in the country

Page 5: Understanding the polling process

Where is Voting Held?

●  In schools (for most areas) ●  Divided into multiple streams (classrooms) ●  Approximately 200-500 voters per stream ●  Voters allocated by IC number (therefore by age) ●  Older voters tend to be in stream 1 (downstairs)

Page 6: Understanding the polling process
Page 7: Understanding the polling process

When is Voting Held?

●  Up to the Election Commission ●  Normally a weekend (since schools must be used) ●  8am to 5pm ●  Counting done after 5pm

Page 8: Understanding the polling process

Who is Involved?

●  Polis ●  Penyelia Pusat Mengundi ●  Ketua Tempat Mengundi (KTM) ●  Kerani Pengundian (KP) ●  Polling Agents / Counting Agents (Station Master) ●  Voters

Page 9: Understanding the polling process
Page 10: Understanding the polling process

Can YOU be a PACA?

Qualifications are:- ●  Malaysian citizen >= 21 years old ●  Not a convicted/imprisoned criminal (in last 5

years) ●  Not a bankrupt ●  Appointed by the candidate (IMPORTANT)

Page 11: Understanding the polling process

Station Master Instructions (per school)

●  Role: Oversee, lead, and ensure PACA play their roles

●  Overall coordination ●  Located at meeting points at schools ●  Has a big umbrella and 4x stools ●  Holds PACA kits for distribution ●  Emergency contact for PACAs

All information on this slide is DAP-specific!

Page 12: Understanding the polling process

PACA Instructions

●  Bring your IC ●  Bring your handphone (fully charged) + battery/

charger ●  Dressing – smart casual (red, NO PARTY LOGO)

–  Collar polo t-shirt / short sleeve shirt –  Long pants/skirt (no shorts or miniskirts) –  Shoes (no slippers) –  No caps

All information on this slide is DAP-specific!

Page 13: Understanding the polling process

PACA Instructions

●  2 shifts (get PACA kit from station master) –  Shift 1 – 7am to 1pm –  Shift 2 – 1pm to 5pm (come at 12pm!) –  Counting is after 5 pm till whenever (may be same

person) ●  Counting agents to be on-site from 4.15pm for

standby ●  Don't forget to vote yourself!

All information on this slide is DAP-specific!

Page 14: Understanding the polling process

The PACA Kit

●  Appointment letter (from EC) ●  Borang Sumpah Kerahsiaan (Borang A) ●  SPR ID (with photo) ●  Stationary ●  Borang 14 (x2) and Borang 13 (x2) ●  Count form ●  Paper ●  Electoral roll

Page 15: Understanding the polling process
Page 16: Understanding the polling process
Page 17: Understanding the polling process
Page 18: Understanding the polling process
Page 19: Understanding the polling process

Process of Voting

General time-line of election day ●  Sealing of ballot boxes ●  Actual Voting (8am to 5pm) ●  Closing of voting ●  Counting of votes

Page 20: Understanding the polling process

Sealing of Ballot Box

●  First shift must arrive early (by 7am) ●  Inspect surroundings ●  Inspect ballot box (make sure its empty) BEFORE

it is sealed ●  Sign on seal (leave sample of your signature on the

count form)

All information on this slide is DAP-specific!

Page 21: Understanding the polling process

Sealing of Ballot Box

Page 22: Understanding the polling process

Sealing of Ballot Box

Page 23: Understanding the polling process

Actual Voting

●  Voters are allowed in by policeman (one at a time) ●  Voter hands IC to KP1 for verification ●  KP1 checks if voter has already voted on list ●  KP1 checks voter's finger for indelible ink ●  KP2 marks voter's finger with indelible ink ●  KP1 checks voter's name off the list and reads out

IC number and name

Page 24: Understanding the polling process

Actual Voting

●  KP1 checks voter's name off the list and reads out IC number and name

●  KP3 'chops' ballot paper and hands it to voter –  Please do NOT request another ballot paper as

mentioned in a lot of emails/FB posts

●  Voter marks ballot paper in the booth ●  Voter drops ballot papers in ballot boxes ●  Voter leaves the classroom

Page 25: Understanding the polling process

Actual Voting (Indelible Ink)

Page 26: Understanding the polling process

Actual Voting (Ballot Paper)

Page 27: Understanding the polling process

Actual Voting (Ballot Paper)

Page 28: Understanding the polling process

Actual Voting (Ballot Paper)

Page 29: Understanding the polling process

Actual Voting (PACA rules)

●  Handphones officially disallowed (but SMS-ing discreetly has so far been okay)

●  Do not leave the room (if MUST leave, obtain permission from KTM and BRING your ID and letter of appointment)

●  Do not drink too much water (no toilet breaks due to 2-hr rule)

●  Keep alert (always watch the ballot box!) ●  Do not speak to voters ●  Do not display any party symbols

Page 30: Understanding the polling process

Actual Voting (PACA rules)

●  Do not argue with KTM (has the right to kick you out)

●  Wear SPR ID at all times ●  If sending an SMS (to station master), ensure

acknowledgement, if none comes, resend ●  Make notes of any irregularities ●  Produce letter of appointment to anyone who

requests it (police, KTM, etc.)

3rd line is DAP-specific!

Page 31: Understanding the polling process

Actual Voting (PACA role)

●  Be alert, watch out for any irregularities ●  When KP calls name out:-

–  Check to see if name is on the list and if anything seems wrong

–  Check to see if finger has indelible ink (do not approach voter)

●  Any other suspicious activity ●  Use ruler and pencil to cancel out voters who have

voted

Page 32: Understanding the polling process

Actual Voting (PACA role)

Page 33: Understanding the polling process

Actual Voting (PACA role)

●  Count form –  Contains sample of your signature (for Counting Agent

to verify) –  Keep a rough count of voter numbers and estimated

ethnicity (DO NOT talk to voter, just best guess) –  Purpose is for PACA coordinator to monitor trends and

see if any particular segment of society is not voting (may indicate intimidation or other problems)

All information on this slide is DAP-specific!

Page 34: Understanding the polling process

Actual Voting (PACA role)

Page 35: Understanding the polling process

Actual Voting (PACA shift change)

●  Ensure smooth transition (wait for a suitable time to change)

●  Communicate! Share and explain notes ●  For 2nd shift, make sure counts tally on Borang 13

Page 36: Understanding the polling process

Closing of Voting

●  Closing is at 5pm sharp (sometimes earlier) –  Anyone inside the room is still allowed to vote –  The mouth of the ballot box is sealed and signed by

Polling Agent (2nd shift) –  Polling Agent changeover to Counting Agent (if not the

same person)

●  Do not leave the stream (ballot box) unattended ●  Ensure counting agent is in the stream before

leaving

Page 37: Understanding the polling process
Page 38: Understanding the polling process
Page 39: Understanding the polling process
Page 40: Understanding the polling process

Counting of Votes

Page 41: Understanding the polling process

Counting of Votes

●  Trays (Dulang) will be arranged on the table –  One tray for each candidate (with party/independent

symbol) –  UNDI BELUM DIKIRA –  RAGU –  DITOLAK

●  Seals on ballot boxes are broken ●  Split for counting (Parliament/State)

Page 42: Understanding the polling process

Counting of Votes

●  All ballot papers are taken out and placed in the 'UNDI BELUM DIKIRA' tray

●  Tied (counted) in bunches of 10s and 100s with rubber bands

●  Record how many ballot papers in the box ●  Compare with Borang 13

Page 43: Understanding the polling process

Counting of Votes

Page 44: Understanding the polling process

Counting of Votes

●  If extra in box compared to Borang 13, must find and remove the extra (based on serial number/perforation)

●  If same or less, count continues ●  Kerani starts to sort, KTM will state the party name ●  Kerani will place in appropriate tray ●  Any uncertainty, place in the 'RAGU' tray

Page 45: Understanding the polling process

Counting of Votes

●  Once all split into appropriate trays, any ballot papers in 'RAGU' tray are re-examined

●  If accepted, will be chopped “Diterima” and placed in the appropriate candidate's tray

●  If rejected, will be chopped “Ditolak” and placed in the 'DITOLAK' tray

●  Finally, ballot papers in each candidate's tray counted

Page 46: Understanding the polling process
Page 47: Understanding the polling process

Counting of Votes (Recount)

●  Recount can be requested by PACA, SPR, or Kerani Mengundi if margin is <= 4%

Page 48: Understanding the polling process

Counting of Votes (Borang 14)

●  Borang 14 contains the official result (after checking and recount) for the stream

●  Each Counting Agent gets one form which is cross-signed by KTM and other Counting Agents

●  The MOST important form of the day

Page 49: Understanding the polling process

Counting of Votes (PACA rules)

●  Do not be late or on time, be early! (4.15 pm) ●  Report to station master and then proceed to stream ●  Otherwise same rules as for Polling Agent apply ●  Know what is considered a vote and what is

considered spoilt (examples to follow) ●  This is the time to be assertive if needed and if

something suspicious is observed (KTM needs your signature to go home)

All information on this slide is DAP-specific!

Page 50: Understanding the polling process

Counting of Votes (PACA role)

●  When ballot box seal is broken, check with signature on count form (1st Polling Agent)

●  If your Parliament/State counterpart is absent, plead for counting to be consecutive rather than simultaneous (so that both can be observed)

●  Don't try to count mentally as will affect your concentration, just identify the 'RAGU' votes

●  If Kerani Mengundi is going too fast, ask to slow down

All information on this slide is DAP-specific!

Page 51: Understanding the polling process

Counting of Votes (PACA role)

●  Make sure votes go into the right tray! ●  After all counting is finished, make sure to get

KTM's signature on Borang 14 (if it was 'forgotten', use the one in your PACA kit), the other Counting Agent's signature isn't important

●  Hand-deliver Borang 14 back to your station master, who will hand-deliver it to the campaign manager

All information on this slide is DAP-specific!

Page 52: Understanding the polling process
Page 53: Understanding the polling process
Page 54: Understanding the polling process
Page 55: Understanding the polling process
Page 56: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

What makes a Ballot Paper Valid? ●  At least one clear mark indicating candidate choice What makes a Ballot Paper Invalid? ●  Party symbols/drawings/words/names ●  Markings on more than one candidate ●  Missing perforation ●  Mark is outside the candidate's row ●  Torn paper where perforation is missing

Page 57: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Examples of Valid Votes

Page 58: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 59: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 60: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 61: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 62: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 63: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 64: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 65: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 66: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 67: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 68: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 69: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 70: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 71: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 72: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 73: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 74: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 75: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 76: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Examples of Invalid Votes

Page 77: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 78: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 79: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 80: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 81: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 82: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 83: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 84: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 85: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 86: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers

Page 87: Understanding the polling process

Interpreting Ballot Papers