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Ballot box

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Transparent ballot boxes used in Ukraine

Aballot boxis a temporarily sealed container, usually a square box though sometimes atamper resistantbag, with a narrow slot in the top sufficient to accept aballot paperin anelectionbut which prevents anyone from accessing thevotescast until the close of the voting period. Aballot drop boxallows voters who have received a ballot by mail to submit it for counting in a self-service fashion. In the United States, ballot boxes are usually sealed after the end of polling, and transported to vote-counting centers.[1]

Variants

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While ballot boxes, other than drop boxes, are usually located inpolling stations,mobile ballot boxes also exist. These are taken to people's homes in some countries so that they do not have to travel to the polling station.[2]Mobile ballot boxes are very popular in Eastern Europe, in which 90% of countries have provisions for their use, but are very limited in use in Western Europe.[3]They are also only used in a small fraction of countries in Africa and the Americas.[3]

Transparent ballot boxes may be used in order for people to be able to witness that the box is empty prior to the start of the election, and not stuffed with fraudulent votes.[4]This style of ballot boxes (specifically, glass ballot boxes) had become a staple in the United States by 1860, in the context of scandals around the use of false bottoms on election boxes.[4][5]It fell out of use in the United States around the turn of the century, in favor of new voting machines users operated by turning a crank.[4]They are still in use occasionally in other countries, including France.[4]

Ballot drop boxes became more popular during theCOVID-19 pandemicin 2020.[6]In the United States, ballot drop boxes have been in use for about two decades.[7]Drop boxes allow voters to avoid having to use the mail service, and are generally more secure than mail boxes.[7]

When very large ballot papers are used, there may be a feeder mechanism to assist in the deposit of the paper into the box.[citation needed]

History

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In theRoman Republic,each voter initially gave his vote orally to an official who made a note of it on an official tablet, but later in the Republic,[when?]thesecret ballotwas introduced, and the voter recorded his vote with astyluson a wax-coveredboxwoodtablet, then dropped the completed ballot in thesitellaorurna(voting urn), sometimes also calledcista.[8]Paper ballots were used in Rome to some extent as early as 139 BCE.[9]

In ancientIndiain the 10th centuryCholla era,inTamil Nadu,palm leaves and pots were used to elect representatives to village administrations through theKudavolaisystem.[10][11]The candidates' names were written on palm leaves,[10]and these were placed inside a pot.[11]Winners were chosen through the drawing of random ballots.[10]While this system may have been used before the 10th century, there is no direct historical evidence as of 2024.[10]

In ancient Greece, voting was done by dropping small balls or tokens into ballot boxes to select preferred candidates.[9]This method was also used in modern historical secret societies, which used white balls to vote someone into the organization, and black balls to keep them out, the origin of the word "blackball".[9]As of 2022, citizens of Gambia voted by dropping marbles in colored drums, marked with the photo and logo of selected candidates.[9]This system was introduced in 1965 to address illiteracy in voting.[12]

The first Britishsecret ballotusing ballot papers and a ballot box was held inPontefracton 15 August 1872, under the terms of the recently enactedBallot Act 1872.In aministerial by-electionfollowing his appointment asChancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster,Hugh Childerswas re-elected as MP forPontefract.The original ballot box, sealed in wax with a liquorice stamp, is held atPontefract Museum.[13][14]

The first paper ballots and ballot boxes in the United States began appearing in the early 19th century, replacing previousvoice votingpractices.[15]However, these were not popularized until the 1850s, upon the use of theAustralian Secret Ballot,a paper with each candidate's name pre-marked.[9]This system was used in the United States until reforms were passed in the 1880s.[16]Voting was mostly by Australian Secret Ballot until automatic mechanical voting machines, operated with levers, became ubiquitous in the 20th century (1910-1980).[9][15]Punch card voting and optical scanning machines (similar toScanTron), both of which require paper ballots and therefore ballot boxes, came to market around the 1960s.[15]Currently, the most popular way to vote in the United States is through optical scanning machines.[15]

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See also

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References

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  1. ^"How are votes counted?".USAFacts.Retrieved2024-07-09.
  2. ^"Global mobile voting data".International IDEA.Retrieved2024-07-09.
  3. ^ab"Special Voting Arrangements".International IDEA.Retrieved2024-07-09.
  4. ^abcdMagazine, Smithsonian; Nalewicki, Jennifer."A Glass Ballot Box Was the Answer to Voter Fraud in the 19th Century".Smithsonian Magazine.Retrieved2024-07-09.
  5. ^Foutch, Ellery."The Glass Ballot Box and Political Transparency".Commonplace.Retrieved2024-07-09.
  6. ^Sherman, Amy."Why ballot drop boxes became a GOP target".PolitiFact.Retrieved2024-07-09.
  7. ^abSherman, Amy."Ballot drop boxes, long used without issue, draw Trump's ire".PolitiFact.Retrieved2024-07-09.
  8. ^The Oxford Companion to Classical Civilization(eds. Simon Hornblower, Antony Spawforth, Esther Eidinow: Oxford University Press, 2014), p. 267.
  9. ^abcdef"History of Voting Machines".Brittannica ProCon.org.15 December 2022.Retrieved2024-07-09.
  10. ^abcdA, Vignesh (2024-04-14)."Kudavolai system of Cholas: Myth of 'ancient democracy' where nobody voted".The South First.Retrieved2024-07-09.
  11. ^ab"Democracy's ancient roots: Tamil Nadu's tableau showcases historical Kudavolai electoral system".The Print.2024-01-26.Retrieved2024-07-09.
  12. ^"Gambians vote with their marbles".BBC News.22 December 2006.Retrieved2024-07-09.
  13. ^Pontefract's secret ballot box, 1872Archived2019-12-16 at theWayback Machine.
  14. ^"Wakefield Metropolitan District Council website".Archived fromthe originalon 2007-09-27.Retrieved2007-05-06.
  15. ^abcd"How Americans Have Voted Through History: From Voices to Screens".HISTORY.2023-10-31.Retrieved2024-07-09.
  16. ^Cheng, Alicia Yin (2020-02-29)."The Evolution of Election Day".Slate.ISSN1091-2339.Retrieved2024-07-09.
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