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NDI Delegation Notes Administrative Improvements and Less Campaigning in Polling Centers
Voting in region two of the Egyptian People’s Assembly elections showed continued enthusiasm on the part of Egyptians to exercise their right to select the candidates and parties of their choice in Egypt’s first open parliamentary elections, NDI said in a statement released in Cairo.
NDI’s region two delegation included 32 accredited election witnesses from 15 countries. Their findings indicated significant improvements in several logistical aspects of the electoral administration, including a larger number of polling stations that opened on time, fewer instances of assisted voting on the part of polling station staff and party agents, and less campaigning inside polling centers. “Despite the challenges they faced, the judges we saw carried out their duties professionally and impartially,” said Janusz Onyszkiewicz, former minister of defense of Poland, who co-led the delegation.
In addition to increased administrative efficiency, the delegation remarked on the continued enthusiasm of Egyptian voters. “I was impressed by the commitment of the Egyptian people to have their voices heard in this election,” said former U.S. Deputy Secretary of State and co-leader James Steinberg.
NDI’s statement also references the often chaotic and frenzied environment that surrounded the counting centers as ballots were being delivered. “As an election administrator myself, I applaud the transparency and accessibility with which these elections have been conducted,” said Missouri Secretary of State Robin Carnahan, who co-led the delegation. “However, I certainly hope that concerns raised by judges related to centralized counting facilities and the movement of ballots are addressed in future elections.”
The Institute’s delegation was deployed for the two-day election period on Dec. 14 and 15 throughout all nine governorates voting to elect 180 seats to Egypt’s People’s Assembly. Prior to their deployment, delegates met in Cairo with senior government and election officials, political party representatives, candidates, citizen election monitors, civil society leaders and representatives of traditional and new media. The purpose of the delegation was to provide an impartial assessment of the electoral process and to demonstrate the interest of the international community in the strengthening of democratic governance in Egypt. The group included 12 long-term witnesses who have been in the country since early November and who will remain throughout the three rounds of voting and the post-election period.
The delegation recommended the following actions to prepare for future rounds of the People’s Assembly elections:
- Explore all possible avenues to allow for the possibility of counting the ballots for round three initial voting in the polling stations in which they are cast.
- Publish the candidate and party lists as soon as possible to ensure that parties and candidates have time for the filing and adjudication of any ballot-related complaints prior to the printing of ballots so that voters are given accurate voting materials.
- Post the voter list inside each polling center and consider placing SJCE-monitored nonpartisan voter information desks inside each polling center to facilitate the voter check-in process.
- Post sample ballots outside polling stations to help voters identify the candidates and parties of their choice.
- Issue identification badges to accredited party agents to increase their visibility and further discourage them from assisting voters with balloting.
NDI’s international election delegation was funded under a grant from the U.S. Agency for International Development. NDI programs in Egypt are also supported by the Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor at the U.S. Department of State.
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Published Dec. 16, 2011