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The following explains how you can vote on polling day and has links for information about postal and proxy voting.
Follow this link to find out how to register to vote: Registering to vote.
Alternatively, you can make further enquiries at the Elections' Office at Craven District Council using the contact details opposite.
Just before an election, you will be sent a polling card that tells you where and when to vote. On election day, you go to the polling station to vote - usually a local hall or other public building, such as a school in the area where you live. Polling stations are open from 7am to 10pm on polling day.
When you arrive at the polling station, tell the election staff your name and address. You can take your polling card with you to show who you are. The staff at the polling station will give you a ballot paper, which is a list of the people or parties you can vote for. The ballot paper will tell you how many votes you have. You can ask a member of staff at the polling station for help.
No-one is allowed to see who you vote for, so make sure you vote in a polling booth, with a screen around it, so that you can vote in privacy. Put an 'X' by the person or party you want to vote for. Fold your ballot paper, preferably in half, and put it in the ballot box. You can find out further information on the voting process by clicking on the following directgov and Electoral Commission website links.
You can vote in UK general elections once you are on the electoral register and provided that you are also aged 18 or over on polling day
a British citizen, or a Commonwealth citizen or a citizen of the Irish Republic (living in the UK), and not legally excluded from voting, for example, if you are in prison.
At a Parliamentary General Election, all the voters shown on the Register of Electors for the area can vote, with the exception of the following people, who can't vote:
Proxies - Applying for someone to vote on your behalf
There are laws and security measures to prevent people illegally interfering with the elections. It's an offence to:
After every election, a list of those who voted by post will be published, so you can check that your vote was received. Certain people can apply to observe elections in polling stations, when postal ballot papers are opened and when votes are counted.
Page last updated: 28 May 2012
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Craven District Council
1 Belle Vue Square
Broughton Road
Skipton
North Yorkshire
BD23 1FJ
Telephone: 01756 700 600
Fax: 01756 700 657