General elections In
England and Wales the post of returning officer for
general elections is an honorary one, held by the
high sheriff of the
county for a
county constituency or the mayor or chairman of the local council for a
borough constituency. If a constituency overlaps district and county borders, the returning officer is designated by the
Secretary of State for Justice. In practice, the task of conducting the election is delegated to an
acting returning officer, who is usually a senior officer in the local authority (the only duties which can be reserved and undertaken by the returning officer are related to the receipt of the
writ and the declaration of the result, and only if written notice is given by the returning officer to the acting returning officer). In an English or Welsh constituency where the returning officer is the chairman of the local district council or the mayor if a borough council, the
electoral registration officer is automatically the acting returning officer. In an English or Welsh constituency where the
high sheriff or mayor is returning officer, the acting returning officer is designated by the
Secretary of State for Justice. In
Scotland, there is no office of acting returning officer and the position of returning officer is not an honorary one. The returning officer for general elections is the same person who has been appointed returning officer for the election of councillors in the local authority in which the constituency is situated. If a constituency covers more than one local authority area, the
Secretary of State for Justice designates which local authority returning officer will discharge the function. In
Northern Ireland, the
Chief Electoral Officer acts as the returning officer. Returning officers normally announce the results after the count in the following manner:
Recall petitions The returning officer for a constituency additionally acts as the petitions officer for recall petitions.
Local elections In
England and
Wales, every district council or unitary authority is required to appoint an officer of the council to be the returning officer for the election of councillors to their local authority, and any parish councils in their area. County councils must also appoint a returning officer for the election of councillors within the county. ==See also==