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Peers inflict defeat on UK Government over controversial voter ID proposals

06 Apr 2022 5 minute read
The House of Lords. Picture by the House of Lords (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0).

Controversial election reforms have been amended after peers inflicted a defeat on the UK Government over plans to introduce voter ID.

The Welsh Government has already secured concessions that mean large parts of the UK Government’s Elections Bill will not apply to Senedd and local government elections in Wales, both of which are devolved.

However, ID would still be required at Westminster General Elections as those are reserved to the UK Parliament.

The Bill proposes the introduction of mandatory photo ID, as well as measures relating to the administration and conduct of elections, overseas electors and UK citizens, and amendments to the role of the Electoral Commission.

People would be required to show an approved form of photographic identification before collecting their ballot paper to vote in a polling station under measures contained in the Elections Bill.

But peers voted 199 to 170, a majority 29, to support an amendment from Conservative former minister Lord Willetts to expand the list of accepted identification to include non-photo documents such as birth certificates, bank statements, council tax demands and library cards.

Lord Willetts argued this would enable the Government to meet its 2019 manifesto commitment to introduce “identification to vote” at polling stations in a bid combat fraud but also prevent large numbers of people being turned away from voting.

Peers also argued the Conservatives’ 2019 manifesto did not specify “photo ID” but merely identification.

Under the terms of the Bill, the requirement for photo ID to vote would apply across the UK in general elections and a free voter card would be available from councils for people without a suitable form of ID.

But critics do not believe the scale of the problem justifies the move and warn it will hit turnout.

Lord Willetts said there is “no evidence” that personation, voting in an election by pretending to be someone else, is a significant problem in the British electoral system.

Costs

He told the debate on the Bill at report stage: “The costs imposed by this measure seem to me to go way beyond the scale of the problem, costs estimated at £180 million over 10 years.

“If a broader range of documents are accepted that removes the need for a new separate group of voter ID cards and that hence lowers the costs involved.”

Lord Willetts questioned what might happen at the next election if “hundreds of voters per constituency” confronted with the Government’s photo ID requirement were turned away from polling stations and do not return.

He said: “Imagine if the outcome of the next election is a modest majority, I hope for the party which I am a member, where throughout the day the media story has been voters being turned away from polling stations?

“That seems to me a very significant political and constitutional risk that does need to be taken into account if this measure is introduced.”

Independent crossbench peer Lord Woolley of Woodford, the founder and director of Operation Black Vote, had tabled an amendment to remove the voter ID proposals from the Bill but did not push it to a vote in the Lords.

He said recently there was “one conviction” for voter fraud “out of 47 million voters”, adding: “It means you’ve got more chance of being struck down by lightning, I think it’s 300,000-to-one.

“You’ve got more chance of winning the National Lottery, which is 46 million-to-one.

“The case for fraud hasn’t been made.”

‘Cynical ploy’

Green Party peer Baroness Jones of Moulsecoomb said of voter ID: “It’s a cynical ploy, a clear attempt by the Government to make it harder for people to vote in elections.”

But Conservative former minister Baroness Verma said she has spent weeks talking to people from all backgrounds, including black, Asian, minority ethnic and poor communities, in Leicester.

She said: “When I ask them would they object to a voter ID card with a photograph, I’ve not had one person object to it and I don’t understand where this ‘evidence’ keeps coming from that the BAME community or the ones on the lowest incomes are going to be disenfranchised.”

Lady Verma said people in Leicester have raised concerns with her about the integrity of elections on several occasions.

Cabinet Office minister Lord True said plans to include further forms of ID to access polling stations would “weaken the security of our elections”, telling peers: “The majority of the suggestions do not share a photograph of the elector, so cannot provide the appropriate level of proof that the bearer is who they say they are.”

He added: “Should further forms of photo identification become available and, I stress this, be sufficiently secure, I do wish to reassure the House that the Bill already makes provision… for the list to be amended so that additional identification can be added or removed as necessary without the need for further primary legislation.”

Peers are expected to make further changes to the Bill before it returns to the Commons as part of the parliamentary process known as ping-pong.

This is when proposed legislation moves between the two Houses until agreement on its wording is reached.


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Grayham Jones
2 years ago

You need to get the people out in your town’s to vote for a new Wales 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 vote Plaid Cymru 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 start fighting for a new wales 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 kick all English party’s out of wales that’s the Tories Labour and all Brexit party’s vote Plaid Cymru 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

Carol Loughlin
Carol Loughlin
2 years ago
Reply to  Grayham Jones

*Wales

Mab Meirion
Mab Meirion
2 years ago

They are a devious lot on the government benches. If they could release the report by Ms Gray and the Russian report etc, and trace all the stolen Covid money we might be better served for the cost of their wages…

Y Cymro
Y Cymro
2 years ago

Don’t celebrate too soon. Corrupt clown Boris Johnson If he can’t get his own way to manipulate electoral system will likely bypass the House of Lord’s as done when he tried to prorogue parliament to engineer a no deal Brexit.

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