Malaysia

GE15: cheating, tampering of ballot boxes highly unlikely, says expert

Analyst notes candidates have appointed polling agents to verify vote count, can file petition to dispute results

Updated 1 year ago · Published on 18 Nov 2022 6:04PM

GE15: cheating, tampering of ballot boxes highly unlikely, says expert
Election analyst G. Manimaran, a former member of the Electoral Reform Committee, says that instances of tampering with ballot papers or boxes were ‘very rare’ as the Election Commission has a robust system in place. – SYEDA IMRAN/The Vibes pic, November 18, 2022

by A. Azim Idris

KUALA LUMPUR – The chances of electoral cheating during the vote-tallying process are extremely slim as the Election Commission (EC) has a robust system in place, said an expert.

Election analyst G. Manimaran, a former member of the Electoral Reform Committee, said instances of tampering with ballot papers or boxes were “very rare” or “won’t happen at all”, for a host of reasons.

Firstly, Manimaran said during the vote-counting process – which usually commences at the polling stations within half an hour of their closure – would be carried out in the presence of voting agents appointed by the election candidates.

“Every single vote will be counted in front of them (polling agents) and the number of votes will be filled up in a form, which would then be signed off by all polling agents,” he said when contacted by The Vibes.

Manimaran was responding to concerns of tampering with ballot papers and boxes, especially while they are in transit from the polling stations to the district polling centres.

He said after the initial vote count at the polling stations, which are usually schools or community halls where people cast their votes, the ballot papers would then be returned to the ballot boxes before they are transported to the district polling centres.

However, he suggested that any form of tampering during the transfer of these items would be futile as votes collected at the polling stations would have already been counted and signed off by the polling agents.

Furthermore, he noted that the transfer of the ballot boxes would also be done with the help of the police and in the presence of polling agents to ensure the process is not interrupted.

He said the boxes will then be brought to the district polling centres where all the votes from all polling stations would be tallied according to the respective channels, or voting streams.

He said due to the signed-off documents – namely Forms 13, 14, and 15 – the candidates will have the list of votes accumulated based on every stream.

“All the votes will be tabulated in front of everyone (polling agents and returning officers),” Manimaran said.

“There’s no room for cheating.”

Asked about what transpired at the district polling centres, Manimaran said the returning officers would finalise the tally from all streams and polling stations, and the results would need to be signed off by all candidates or polling agents.

If there are complaints of irregularities, Manimaran said the returning officer would still proceed with the finalised results, but the candidates can raise a dispute in court by filing an election petition, and that it was up to the courts to look into the merits of the claims.

Responding to previous allegations of election results changing after electrical blackouts at certain district polling centres in the past, Manimaran said these claims were unfounded.

“There is no proof that results had changed during the blackouts. Even if it did happen, the candidate can always file an election petition, but there was none at all.” – The Vibes, November 18, 2022

Related News

Malaysia / 3mth

Elderly woman loses RM800,000 to digital investment scam

Malaysia / 4mth

Billboard in TTDI of 'cheating husband' goes viral

Malaysia / 7mth

BN raring to have second shot at Kemaman seat if election held: Zahid

Malaysia / 7mth

Court quashes PAS MP’s GE15 victory in Kemaman

Malaysia / 7mth

Witness denies lying in Guan Eng’s corruption case

Malaysia / 9mth

Freed of faking docs, ex-manager faces another 47 charges for cheating

Spotlight

Malaysia

PRS proposes party president to fill vacant Senate president’s post

Malaysia

Ex-inspector escapes gallows, gets 33 years for wife’s murder

Malaysia

Foreigners make up 10% of Malaysia population

Malaysia

Cop pleads not guilty to student’s murder

Malaysia

Banks warn about scammers who impersonate NSRC officers

Malaysia

Jeffrey recalls memories of ISA confinement 33 years later

By Jason Santos

You may be interested

Malaysia

Assistant supervisor pleads not guilty to drunk driving, injuring national kayak athlete

Malaysia

Najib house arrest application must follow process, says PM

Malaysia

Masked man kills 2 cops in attack on Johor police station

Malaysia

Putrajaya wants Meta to explain removal of Anwar-Hamas posts

Malaysia

Cops nab man who crashed into national kayaker Siti Nurul Masyitah

Malaysia

Kayak athlete badly injured after crash with alleged drunk driver

Malaysia

Students say ‘no’ to opening UiTM to non-Bumi

By Noel Achariam

Malaysia

Sarawak PKR claims federal funds not properly disbursed

By Stephen Then