Labour candidate leaks postal votes via Twitter
By Jennifer Scott,
Bristol East is now in the know about how postal voters in the area crossed their ballot papers, thanks to a hasty tweet from a Labour candidate.
Kerry McCarthy, who is standing for Labour in the southwest constituency, boasted proudly via her Twitter account that Labour had received a much higher number of the postal votes than its Conservative and Liberal Democrat competitors.
Under electoral law no-one can announce any election results until after the polls close. Following the Twitter post, McCarthy removed the offending post. However it had already gone viral, being retweeted by many of her 5,835 followers.
The electoral commission confirmed that the punishment for breaking this section of the law could lead to a £5,000 fine or six months imprisonment.
McCarthy released a statement on her website saying: "On hearing the results of a random and unscientific sample of postal votes, I posted them on Twitter. It was a thoughtless thing to do, and I very quickly realised that it was not appropriate to put such information in the public domain.”
She added : “Because this was not official information, and no votes had been counted, I thought of it as being akin to canvass returns, i.e. telling people how well we were doing with Labour promises on the doorstep, but I appreciate now it was wrong to do so.”
Bristol City Council has now passed the matter onto the police and the case is being looked into.
You may also like...
Sponsored Links
advertisement
You may also like...
Latest Public Sector Analysis & Insight
The Digital Economy Act: Is it doomed to never happen?
As a further delay hits part of the implementation of the Digital Economy Act, is this just a small hiccup, or is the Act being rendered toothless already? Simon Brew takes a look.
- Does the government want to snoop on your data?
- Q&A: Rajeeb Dey, CEO Enternships
- Government IT: Apples for the mandarins
- Striving to solve the security skills crisis
- 2011: The year in news
- Are the cookie laws crumbling already?
- UK rural broadband: too little, and too late
- How the Data Protection Act's death will punish the UK economy
- Education: glad to be a geek
Latest Public Sector Reviews
HTC Flyer review: First Look
- HP TouchPad review: First Look
- RIM BlackBerry PlayBook review - First Look
- MWC 2011: Acer Iconia A100 and A500 reviews – first look videos
- MWC 2011: HP TouchPad review - first look video
- MWC 2011: RIM BlackBerry PlayBook review - first look video
- MWC 2011: HP Pre3 review - first look video
- MWC 2011: Motorola Pro review - first look video
- MWC 2011: HTC Flyer tablet review - first look video
- MWC 2011: Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 review – first look video
advertisement
Most popular
- Apple iPad 3 vs iPad 2 head-to-head review
- Dell EqualLogic PS6100XS review
- Chromebooks: What's gone wrong?
- ICO: Fines for cookie law breakers
- UK regulator shuts down Angry Birds scam
- Open source software driving cloud-based innovation
- Fujitsu targets enterprises with Android ICS tablet
- IBM bans use of Siri on iPhones
- Dell PowerEdge R820 review
- BlackBerry 7 OS certified to carry 'Restricted' UK government information
Latest News Videos in Public Sector
Q&A: David Elton, PA Consulting Group
CIOs are increasingly influential, but have to juggle "dual roles", study finds.
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free whitepapers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.





