B.C.'s electoral officer wants to boost youth vote
Reports recommends testing new voting technologies on pilot basis
The Canadian Press
Posted: Nov 21, 2011 11:44 AM PT
Last Updated: Nov 21, 2011 11:43 AM PT
Elections B.C. wants to try out some new voting methods on the internet and take steps to get young people more interested in voting.
Those are among the recommendations of Chief Electoral Officer Keith Archer in a new report to the legislature.
He says there's growing interest among voters in the possibility of implementing Internet voting but he needs the government to give him the power to experiment with some new ideas.
Archer says he'd like to test several new voting technologies on a pilot basis.
He also says B.C. residents aged 18 to 24 have the lowest voter participation rates and he's suggesting they could be registered before they leave high school, as is already done in Australia and some American states.
Archer says students could be registered on a provisional basis as young as 16 to get them engaged in the process, with the actual voting age left at 18.
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