Did Knowsley Council and Tesco Influence the Voting in the Local Elections ?
Sun 11 May 2008
Posted by admin under: Local News [2] CommentsSince new labour seized power in 1997 they have devised different schemes to increase voter turnout. All out Postal Voting was introduced in 2004. It resulted in numerous prosecutions for people interfering with the voting process.
It is illegal to use some ones postal vote without their permission. In new labours kingdom of Knowsley it was reported that a Kirkby based new labour man was seen depositing a large envelope full of postal votes into a public collection box in the local Council building. At the same time a residential home in Kirkby ordered 48 postal votes for residents, it was only after they were visited by an independent candidate that the Home returned only 8 postal votes, avoiding a possible investigation into why postal votes had been ordered for people suffering various stages of Dementia and Alzheimer’s.
The man who deposited the votes in the Council building was believed to have been the same man involved in the care homes postal votes. For legal reasons we cannot name him, however his identity is known to the authorities charged with the upholding the conduct of local elections. In these two examples of questionable conduct the Councillor concerned emerged unscathed.
Many leading figures in the judiciary have expressed fears about the safety of postal voting.
Now it has emerged that Knowsley Council face charges of breaching the guidelines of the Electoral Commission on publicity during the recent local elections.
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