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KU students' online voting for U.S. election  Send to a friend
Written by Henry Brennan   
Wednesday, 05 November 2008 15:19

Presidental election

American students studying at Kingston were offered a new online service designed to simplify the voting process in time for the 2008 Presidential Election.


Thousands of American students choose to study here in the UK, an estimated 200 of which have elected for Kingston University.

Voting from outside of the US has never been an easy task in previous years however due to the absence of a uniform balloting procedure amongst the different states, which has led to a dramatic drop in electoral participation from overseas voters in previous years.


The complications of past years has led to the establishment of the Overseas Vote Foundation, an online organisation that has committed itself to gathering absentee ballots, particularly amongst first time voters living overseas.

American students here at Kingston welcomed the initiative.  Philip Cordery, 22, said: “It’s been extremely complicated in the past to vote when you live abroad. I think the online service would encourage a much greater level of voter turnout, particularly amongst students. This election is extremely important to me and I am pleased that measures have been introduced to make it easier to participate.”


President of the Overseas Vote Foundation, Susan Dzieduszycka-Suina, has great faith in the new system and is confident it will put an end to: “voters having to pour through a federal guidebook some 500 pages long” in their efforts to successfully request and deliver their vote. Visitors to the website are given clear instructions on how to register their ballot and can also print off their voting slip.


Of the nearly 90,000 voters the service has helped to register, 26 per cent were first-time voters and for 70 per cent this was the first time they have voted from overseas. More than one-third were younger than 30, many of whom are studying at university level in the UK.


For the majority of those studying at Kingston, 2008 represents the first Presidential Election that they have been able to have a say in.

Rundown of Election Night
11.00pm GMT November 4th 2008: Polls closed in Indiana and Kentucky. 

12.00am GMT, November 5th 2008: Polls closed in New Hampshire, Vermont, Virginia, South Carolina, Georgia and Florida.

12.30am GMT:  Polls closed in Ohio, West Virginia and North Carolina.

1.00am GMT:  Polls closed in Maine, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, Washington DC, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Illinois, Michigan, Missouri, South Dakota, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas.

1.30am GMT:  Polls closed in Arkansas.

2.00am GMT:  Polls closed in Wisconsin, Minnesota, Nebraska, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona.

3.00am GMT:  Polls closed in Iowa, North Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Utah and Nevada.

4.00am GMT:  Polls closed in Washington, Oregon, California and Hawaii.

5.00am GMT:  Polls closed in Alaska.

5.00am – 6.00am GMT:  Barack Obama was declared U.S. President

 

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3.26 Copyright (C) 2008 Compojoom.com / Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved."

 
Author of this article: Henry Brennan

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