TBH I don't know how this would be enforced. But the idea itself, I think it's a reasonable one. The authoritative result should at the polling station. That was in fact the rationale behind electronic transmission of the results. Minimize or eliminate chances of altering results; except that it simply never got to work, whether by design or accident.
It may not prevent ballot stuffing. But that is something EVID ought to eliminate. Again, EVID, by design or accident, never got to see the light of day.
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Keep in mind that this is Kenya.)
The essential problem is not in the mere reporting from polling stations; that of itself is a good idea. The real difficulties arise from the nation that numbers reported at that level should be
binding. I say it would encourage a variation of ballot-stuffing because there would be no need to actually stuff ballot-boxes; instead, just report whatever number one has in mind.
Going to the next levels, there is the potential for a nightmare: What happens when there is a huge difference between the figures from the polling stations and those at the tallying centre, those from the actual (physical) ballot papers etc., given that the starting figures are supposedly binding? And so on. I see the possibility of numerous legal and other types of problems.
Replace "binding" with "provisional", and you have fewer problems. For votes to be binding or authoritative at the polling-station level, it seems to me that at least two things are necessary:
(1) All candidates have their representatives at all polling stations.
(2) All of the representatives at a polling station agree on the result to be announced.
How would that work in tribal Kenya, where violence against "the other side" is the norm in elections? What would happen to a Raila (Uhuru) representative deep in Central (Nyanza) if he or she objects to bogus results?
Simanova wrote:
For instance Khalwale recounts an incident in Kakamega where the polling officer refused to transmit genuine results and only did so late at night after getting the figures to transmit from the IEBC ... This would not have happened if the results were read at the station in public view.
That's one side of the coin. The other side is where the "public" at the polling station is in favour of announcing inflated figures that support their "our man". Would voters in Central (Nyanza) really object to bogus figures being announced in favour of Uhuru (Raila)?