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AEC confirms missing ballots found at electoral worker's home
AEC confirms missing ballots found at electoral worker's home

News.com.au

time14-05-2025

  • Politics
  • News.com.au

AEC confirms missing ballots found at electoral worker's home

Almost 2000 ballots that went missing on election night in the Sydney electorate of Barton have now been recovered at the home of a temporary AEC worker. The ballots, stored in a secure a secure container, were collected by the worker from the Hurstville polling booth on May 3 and were then not delivered to the commission's central counting centre. Officials only noticed the missing container when a routine recount of the votes began. 'The AEC's tracking processes for ballot paper transport containers identified that one of the two transport containers for the Hurstville polling place was not returned to the central counting centre on election night as it should have been,' an AEC spokesperson told NewsWire. 'Ballot papers were securely packaged in the presence of scrutineers with an authorised transport officer collecting two ballot paper transport containers for delivery to a central counting centre to await further processing. 'The staff member responsible erroneously returned one less container than was expected.' After exhausting numerous lines of inquiry, the box was recovered from the worker -undamaged and unopened - early last week. All 1866 votes had already been counted and did not affect the result in the seat of Barton. The spokesperson said further investigations were under way to ensure the incident did not happen again. 'The AEC takes ballot paper handling extremely seriously and deeply regrets this incident,' they added. It has not been explained how the ballots ended up at the worker's home. Labor candidate Ash Ambihaipahar won the seat with more than 60 per cent of the two-party-preferred vote, beating the Liberal Party's Fiona Douskou.

BREAKING NEWS Australian election rocked by scandal after missing ballot papers are found at electoral worker's home
BREAKING NEWS Australian election rocked by scandal after missing ballot papers are found at electoral worker's home

Daily Mail​

time13-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Daily Mail​

BREAKING NEWS Australian election rocked by scandal after missing ballot papers are found at electoral worker's home

About 2,000 missing ballot papers that went missing on election night have been found in the home of a temeporary Australian Electoral Commission worker. Because the votes had already been counted, the incident did not impact the result in the NSW seat of Barton. 'Ballot papers were securely packaged in the presence of scrutineers with an authorised transport officer collecting two ballot paper transport containers for delivery to a central counting centre to await further processing,' an AEC spokesperson said in a statement. The AEC revealed that a worker collected 1,866 House of Representatives votes in a secure container from a Hurstville polling booth on May 3 but did not deliver it to the central counting facility. 'The staff member responsible erroneously returned one less container than was expected.' AEC officials only noticed the ballots were missing last week. 'The AEC's tracking processes for ballot paper transport containers identified that one of the two transport containers for the Hurstville polling place was not returned to the central counting centre on election night as it should have been,' the spokesperson said. 'This issue relates to a single transport container that remained sealed and intact and has not affected the election,' the AEC said. 'The uniquely coded security seals were not broken, and the AEC's purpose-built ballot paper transport container was intact. 'All ballot papers are accounted for. 'The AEC takes ballot paper handling extremely seriously.' The Barton seat was won by Labor's Ash Ambihaipahar, who secured over 60 per cent of the two-party-preferred vote, beating Liberal candidate Fiona Douskou.

AEC investigates after missing ballot papers found at election worker's home
AEC investigates after missing ballot papers found at election worker's home

ABC News

time13-05-2025

  • Politics
  • ABC News

AEC investigates after missing ballot papers found at election worker's home

Almost 2,000 ballot papers went missing on election night and were later recovered from the Sydney home of a temporary Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) worker, the ABC can reveal. While the AEC said the incident did not affect the result in the seat of Barton because the votes had already been counted, it has not explained how the ballots ended up at the worker's home and has launched an investigation. Live results: Find out what's happening in your seat as counting continues The AEC confirmed the worker collected a secure container holding 1,866 House of Representatives votes from a polling booth in the Sydney suburb of Hurstville after polls closed on May 3, but failed to deliver it to the commission's central counting centre. "Ballot papers were securely packaged in the presence of scrutineers with an authorised transport officer collecting two ballot paper transport containers for delivery to a central counting centre to await further processing," an AEC spokesperson said in a statement. "The staff member responsible erroneously returned one less container than was expected." Officials at the AEC only noticed the container was missing when they began a routine recount of votes in the electorate last week. "The AEC's tracking processes for ballot paper transport containers identified that one of the two transport containers for the Hurstville polling place was not returned to the central counting centre on election night as it should have been," the spokesperson said. The AEC recovered the container early last week. Want even more? Here's where you can find all our 2025 federal election coverage Catch the latest interviews and in-depth coverage on ABC iview and ABC Listen "This issue relates to a single transport container that remained sealed and intact and has not affected the election," the AEC said. "The uniquely coded security seals were not broken, and the AEC's purpose-built ballot paper transport container was intact. "All ballot papers are accounted for. "The AEC takes ballot paper handling extremely seriously." Labor's Ash Ambihaipahar won the seat, beating Liberal Fiona Douskou with more than 60 per cent of the two-party-preferred vote. The AEC was not able to provide details about where in the worker's home the container was found. "It was obtained from the individual's home where it was collected by permanent AEC staff," the spokesperson said. "The only specific detail I have regarding the collection is that it was obtained during a conversation outside the staff member's house, following identification of the custody of the container." No system is 100 per cent secure, but the Signal app can be used to protect your identity by using end-to-end encryption. Please read the terms and conditions of the app to work out if it is the best method of communication for you. The commission has launched an investigation into the matter but declined to say whether it had referred the incident to law enforcement agencies. University of Sydney electoral law expert Anne Twomey described the incident as a "serious matter". "Although it had no effect upon the outcome of the election in this case, it could have resulted in the election being held void in that seat if the ballots had been destroyed," Professor Twomey said. "While concerning, this case does remind us that there are many layers of protection built into the electoral system to ensure it is secure. "The system ensured there was accountability, although it seems likely there was some kind of failure to identify immediately that the container had not been delivered to the counting centre." In 2013, the AEC was forced to re-run Western Australia's senate election after 1,370 ballots went missing in what a parliamentary inquiry described as the "greatest failure in the history of the Australian Electoral Commission". Professor Twomey said the latest incident was likely to prompt a fresh inquiry into the commission's transportation of ballot papers. "The AEC will no doubt investigate this matter thoroughly and learn from the failure," she said.

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