Part 1 of the act comprises sections 1 to 9. Section 1 sets out the question to be put to voters, in
English and
Welsh. Section 4 sets out provisions associated with the date of the Referendum, whereby the date for the poll and one or more
2011 United Kingdom local elections,
2011 Scottish Parliament election,
2011 National Assembly for Wales election or
2011 Northern Ireland Assembly election will be taken on the same day. Section 9 set out amendments to the
Representation of the People Act 1983 if the vote was "Yes". These included that the voter puts numbers 1, 2, etc against as many candidates' names as desired; how the count is conducted (
instant run-off); and how the returning officer records the count.
The referendum The act legislated for a referendum to be held in the United Kingdom on whether to introduce the alternative vote electoral method of electing Members of Parliament (MPs) to the House of Commons in all future UK general elections on Thursday 5 May 2011. The referendum would be conducted by the
Electoral Commission and overseen by an appointed chief counting officer (CCO) and a deputy chief counting officer (DCCO) who would declare the final result for the United Kingdom. The Electoral Commission is the public body under the terms of the
Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000 that was given the task to raise public awareness ahead of polling day, and to oversee the conduct of the referendum.
Referendum question The question that appeared on ballot papers in the referendum before the electorate under the act was (in English): In
Wales, the question on the
ballot paper also appeared in
Welsh: permitting a simple
YES /
NO answer (to be marked with a single (X)).
Original proposed question The original proposed question in English was: In Welsh: permitting a simple
YES /
NO answer (to be marked with a single (X)). This wording was criticised by the
Electoral Commission, saying that "particularly those with lower levels of education or literacy, found the question hard work and did not understand it". The Electoral Commission recommended a changed wording to make the issue easier to understand, and the government subsequently amended the Bill to bring it into line with the Electoral Commission's recommendations.
Voting areas Under the provisions of the act, the designation of a "voting area" (also known by some as "Counting areas") on the day of the referendum was to be overseen by "Counting officers" (CO) who were to declare the results of their local areas within the United Kingdom and Gibraltar is as follows: • A district in England for which there is a
district council • A county in England in which there are no districts with councils (
Unitary authority) • A
London borough • The
City of London (including the Inner and Middle Temples) • The
Isles of Scilly • A
constituency of the
Scottish Parliament in
Scotland • A
constituency of the
National Assembly for Wales •
Northern Ireland There were a total of 440 voting areas. 326 in England, 73 in Scotland, 40 in Wales and a single area for Northern Ireland.
Regional counts The act also provides provision for the results from the "voting areas" to fed into twelve "regional counts" to be overseen by "Regional counting officers" (RCO) which were appointed in the following areas and declared the results for their areas as used under the
European Parliamentary Elections Act 2002 but with the exception of
Gibraltar which did not participate in the referendum: •
East Midlands (40 voting areas) •
East of England (47 voting areas) •
Greater London (33 voting areas) •
Northern Ireland (1 voting area) •
North East England (12 voting areas) •
North West England (39 voting areas) •
Scotland (73 voting areas) •
South East England (67 voting areas) •
South West England (37 voting areas) •
Yorkshire and the Humber (21 voting areas) •
Wales (40 voting areas) •
West Midlands (30 voting areas) The regions each declared their results once all local voting areas had declared their local results late on Friday 7 May 2011. There was no provision under the act for any national or regional recounts by the Chief Counting Officer and Regional Counting Officers.
Franchise The right to vote in the referendum applied to UK residents who are British, Irish and
Commonwealth citizens, in accordance with the provisions of the
Representation of the People Act 1983 and the
Representation of the People Act 2000. Members of the
House of Lords were able to vote in the referendum. Citizens of other EU countries resident in the UK were not allowed to vote unless they were citizens of the
Republic of Ireland,
Malta or
Cyprus. The same Acts permitted UK nationals who had lived overseas for less than 15 years to vote. Voting on the day of the referendum was from 0700 to 2200 BST (
Western European Summer Time). Also under the provisions of the
Representation of the People Act 2000 postal ballots were also permitted in the referendum and were sent out to eligible voters some three weeks ahead of the vote. The minimum age for voters in the referendum was 18 years, in accordance with Representation Acts (above). A
House of Lords amendment proposing to only make the result of the referendum valid if the national turnout was higher than 40% was defeated in the House of Commons.
Referendum result a total of 430 returned majority votes for "No" whilst just ten returned majority votes for "Yes" with all twelve regional count areas returning "No" majorities. The result was declared by Chief counting officer (CCO) and the then chair of the
Electoral Commission Jenny Watson on Saturday 7 May 2011 after all 440 voting areas and the 12 regions of the United Kingdom had declared their results on a national turnout of 42%. The decision by the electorate in all four countries was a decisive "No" to adopting the alternative vote system in all future
United Kingdom general elections.
Results by counting regions Results by constituent countries AV Repeal The alternative vote system provisions within the act were repealed following the decisive "No" vote in the referendum on 8 July 2011 via a Statutory Instrument. ==Part 2 – Parliamentary Constituencies==