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When the polling stations close at 10pm on 4 July, thousands of ballot counters will be flexing their fingers, ready for what could be a very long night’s work.

All the country’s votes will be counted – and recounted – by hand.

But what is it like to be one of the people tasked with delivering democracy by dawn?

Sky News spoke to five ballot counters – who between them have worked more than 100 elections – to find out.

The Newcastle-Sunderland urban myth

Ian Humphries is clocking up his 50th election with Newcastle City Council with 2024’s general election.

You’ll find him in a cavernous sports hall at Northumbria University, just another “Joe Bloggs” getting through the count “as efficiently and quickly as I can”.

Ian Humphries. Pic: Newcastle City Council
Image:
Ian Humphries. Pic: Newcastle City Council

What his fellow counters might not realise is that he is one of the people responsible for taking Newcastle from being around the 300th council to declare its results, to first in the Brexit referendum and then again in the 2017 and 2019 general elections.

The former elections manager tells Sky News it’s an “urban myth” there is a race between Newcastle and Sunderland for who will declare first (Sunderland held the crown from 1992 to 2015).

It’s not about being fast per se, but maximising “accuracy and efficiency”, he says.

Still, there are tactics to deliver that. A move to a new venue was key – a bigger space meant more people, each “blitzing” through just a few boxes each.

If you can get the count done quickly, before tiredness – and sloppiness – sets in, recounts are less likely to be necessary, he says.

“At 5am, how accurate are you?” Ian questions.

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The quest to “shave off minutes” starts at the polling station, where staff are primed to get ballot boxes out the door and into the car of the presiding officer – the person in charge of the polling station – as quickly as possible.

They will ferry the box by the most efficient route to the count venue, where a slick operation is waiting at the door.

The car pulls up, a worker opens the passenger door, grabs the ballot box from where it’s waiting on the passenger seat, closes the door and away the car drives.

The box is handed to a “runner” – normally a university student employed for a night of manual labour – who hurries it into the building to be checked off.

The time-saving strategies mean counting can start soon after 10pm, when previously all the boxes may not have arrived until 11pm.

Staff carry ballot boxes at a counting centre in Thornes Park Stadium after a by-election in Wakefield, Britain, June 23, 2022. REUTERS/Phil Noble
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File pic: Reuters

The counting process has also been honed to make it as accurate and efficient as possible.

Once the number of ballot papers has been verified, they are sorted into piles for each candidate, which are then counted into bundles of 50.

Each bundle has an elastic band running north to south so a “flick check” can be performed.

The counter thumbs through the pile like a flip book – a quick way to see if the same box has been marked on each paper in the stack.

But with boundary changes to contend with in this election, Ian isn’t holding his breath for Newcastle to be the first constituency to declare.

“All bets are off,” he says.

Either way, he’s anticipating an “electric atmosphere” when the sports hall is filled with counters, candidates and their agents.

“Their excitement and sense of jeopardy – you can almost taste it,” Ian says.

The day Chris really earned his pay…

Chris Hobbs has worked every election bar one since 1988, as a poll clerk, presiding officer and counting assistant with Tandridge District Council in Surrey.

During counts that sometimes lasted until 4 or 5am, he has seen every “phallic symbol” and expletive going as voters spoil their ballots.

He says: “I’ve seen cat faces, huge rafts of text explaining why they are spoiling their votes, some abusive text about individual candidates.

“‘Vote for clowns, get a f****** circus!’ was particularly amusing at two o’clock in the morning.”

Pic: Chris Hobbs
Image:
Pic: Chris Hobbs

The voters provide an occasional laugh, but you also feel part of something important, he says, as “democracy happens right before your eyes”.

The Brexit referendum was the busiest election Chris has worked due to the sheer number of voters.

He says he definitely “earned my pay” that day, working as the presiding officer in a polling station set up in a room of a country pub.

“It was a challenging day as people arrived to vote and stayed for a drink or four,” he says.

“It got raucous for a while as well-refreshed folk kept popping back in to try to vote.

“Egged on by their drinking buddies, every hour or so the pub dog was ‘slid’ into the room from the pub to much laughter, covered in political rosettes!”

The count run by Tandridge District Council. Pic: Tandridge District Council
Image:
The count run by Tandridge District Council. Pic: Tandridge District Council

Thatcher, 1997 and the lady who wouldn’t stop talking

Andy Wragg keeps saying each election will be his last – but he’s on 41 and counting, the majority with Rushcliffe Borough Council in south Nottinghamshire.

His first working general election was Margaret Thatcher’s landslide 1983 victory, when he was appointed as a presiding officer aged 22.

It’s a role he’s repeated many times since, as well as working as a ballot counter.

Andy Wragg and his wife Marie, who used to work with him as a poll clerk when he was presiding officer. Pic: Andy Wragg
Image:
Andy Wragg and his wife Marie, who used to work with him as a poll clerk when he was presiding officer. Pic: Andy Wragg

Getting all the ballot boxes from the polling stations to the count venue was more fraught in the days before widespread mobile phones, he tells Sky News.

The verification process – where ballot papers are tallied before the proper count starts – cannot begin until all the boxes are received.

But in one memorable incident, a presiding officer bringing in a ballot box missed a turning and “kept driving south”. In the end, the police had to be dispatched to find her, 50 miles from where she should have been, Andy says.

Having been expected by 11pm, she arrived “rather sheepishly” at around 1.30am.

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The 1997 election was another big one to work on: “You just felt the sway really of it… You felt something was coming at that point,” Andy says.

He once worked at one of the smallest polling stations in the country – a farm cottage “in the middle of nowhere” repurposed for the day for about 150 locals.

The problem was, Andy says, the host of the house knew everyone – and she couldn’t resist popping into the lounge where people were voting for a natter.

They reached a compromise where after people had voted, he sent them through to the kitchen for tea and cake and they then left by the back door.

“Adding cake to the electoral process was unusual, but we had to get them to flow through,” he says.

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How the vote count works

‘You wouldn’t believe the amount of dicks’ – and they’re put on the big screen

As one of the more confident Welsh speakers at Cardiff Council, Cai Maxwell will be making announcements during the ballot count after a day on the road as a polling station inspector.

The count is “high intensity”, he says, with the tension ratcheted up by the intense scrutiny of candidates’ counting agents who make sure everything is accurate.

They “pick you up on everything,” he says.

He remembers one run-in he had when he failed to shake the ballot box upside down to show there were no stray papers tucked in the bottom, resulting in a complaint to the returning officer.

Pic: Libby Gay
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Cai Maxwell worked as a professional pianist before joining Cardiff City Council. Pic: Libby Gay

Cai also takes great joy in the spoilt votes – not least because of how they are inspected, with a spotlight and camera set up so a blown-up version can be displayed on a TV.

“The amount of people who put dicks on ballot papers you would not believe,” he says.

“When you’ve got graffiti like that it’s hilarious because it’s a really formal procedure.

“You’ve got all these people in suits going through this process, looking at the ballot papers and all of them obviously nodding in agreement that yes, that’s invalid.”

But working behind the scenes gives you an insight into how strictly monitored the count is, he says.

As well as the eagle eyes of counting agents, there are strict protocols such as sealing the ballot boxes with tabs (something Andy Wragg remembers being done with wax). This means there is no way for the box to be opened while it’s being taken from the polling station to the count venue.

“I think a lot of people take pride in it because once you’ve seen it from our perspective, there’s absolutely no way it can be meddled with or fixed.”

Election observers watch as staff count ballot papers for the Tiverton and Honiton by-election, at Lords Meadow Leisure Centre in Devon, Britain, June 23, 2022. REUTERS/Paul Childs
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Election observers watch as staff count ballot papers. Pic: Reuters

Sweets, recounts and dress code

Holly Hancocks has worked elections since 2008 – and has seen a lot of the same faces year on year.

“It’s always quite jolly and funny to start,” she says, as workers catch up with people they haven’t seen since the last election.

“Then once the counting begins, it’s very quiet. It’s quite a studious environment.”

She has held various roles, including at polling stations as a poll clerk and presiding officer, and at the count venue as a runner, counting assistant and count supervisor.

There are always “lots of boiled sweets around” during the count.

“You can’t have anything that would dirty the ballot papers,” Holly explains – and that’s just one of the rules workers must follow.

They’re all about preserving the “sanctity of the ballot paper” and making sure the count is fair, she says.

Read more:
Memorable moments from election campaigns gone by
How party leaders are upping the ante as poll day looms
How to watch and follow results night on Sky News

Holly can be seen in the bottom right during a count. Pic: Redditch Borough Council
Image:
Holly can be seen in the bottom right during a count. Pic: Redditch Borough Council

Ballot papers must remain face up so the ballot number on the bottom is hidden and the candidates can see the votes.

All the workers must also wear neutral-coloured clothes so they are not seen to be supporting a particular party.

Holly says: “You leave your own political opinions at the door. And you have to be a completely neutral party, and that can sometimes feel a bit weird.

“Say there’s 100 count assistants in a room and somebody gets announced as being the victor… and you’ve got 100 people in the room that are just kind of politely clapping without really showing any emotion.”

It’s an “odd juxtaposition” to the exuberant celebrations of the winning party, she says.

Redditch, where she has mostly worked, is a swing seat, which Holly says makes it particularly exciting.

It also means the ballot counters can be in for a long night if it is particularly close and requires a recount.

Holly has seen local elections “where there’s one vote in it, so a full recount has happened… that’s always very tense”.

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Wes Streeting ‘crossed the line’ by opposing assisted dying in public, says Labour peer Harriet Harman

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Wes Streeting 'crossed the line' by opposing assisted dying in public, says Labour peer Harriet Harman

Wes Streeting “crossed the line” by opposing assisted dying in public and the argument shouldn’t “come down to resources”, a Labour peer has said.

Speaking on Sky News’ Electoral Dysfunction podcast, Baroness Harriet Harman criticised the health secretary for revealing how he is going to vote on the matter when it comes before parliament later this month.

MPs are being given a free vote, meaning they can side with their conscience and not party lines, so the government is supposed to be staying neutral.

But Mr Streeting has made clear he will vote against legalising assisted dying, citing concerns end-of-life care is not good enough for people to make an informed choice, and that some could feel pressured into the decision to save the NHS money.

He has also ordered a review into the potential costs of changing the law, warning it could come at the expense of other NHS services if implemented.

Baroness Harman said Mr Streeting has “crossed the line in two ways”.

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“He should not have said how he was going to vote, because that breaches neutrality and sends a signal,” she said.

“And secondly… he’s said the problem is that it will cost money to bring in an assisted dying measure, and therefore he will have to cut other services.

“But paradoxically, he also said it would be a slippery slope because people will be forced to bring about their own death in order to save the NHS money. Well, it can’t be doing both things.

“It can’t be both costing the NHS money and saving the NHS money.”

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Review into assisted dying costs

Baroness Harman said the argument “should not come down to resources” as it is a “huge moral issue” affecting “only a tiny number of people”.

She added that people should not mistake Mr Streeting for being “a kind of proxy for Keir Starmer”.

“The government is genuinely neutral and all of those backbenchers, they can vote whichever way they want,” she added.

Read more on this story:
‘Fix care before assisted dying legislation’
Why assisted dying is controversial – and where it’s already legal

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has previously expressed support for assisted dying, but it is not clear how he intends to vote on the issue or if he will make his decision public ahead of time.

The cabinet has varying views on the topic, with the likes of Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood siding with Mr Streeting in her opposition but Energy Secretary Ed Miliband being for it.

Britain's Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero Ed Miliband walks on Downing Street on the day of the budget announcement, in London, Britain October 30, 2024. REUTERS/Maja Smiejkowska
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Energy Security and Net Zero Secretary Ed Miliband is said to support the bill. Pic: Reuters

Shabana Mahmood arrives 10 Downing Street.
Pic: Reuters
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Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood has concerns. Pic: Reuters

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The Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill is being championed by Labour backbencher Kim Leadbeater, who wants to give people with six months left to live the choice to end their lives.

Under her proposals, two independent doctors must confirm a patient is eligible for assisted dying and a High Court judge must give their approval.

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Labour MP Kim Leadbeater discusses End of Life Bill

The bill will also include punishments of up to 14 years in prison for those who break the law, including coercing someone into ending their own life.

MPs will debate and vote on the legislation on 29 November, in what will be the first Commons vote on assisted dying since 2015, when the proposal was defeated.

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SEC crypto cases will be ‘dismissed or settled’ under Trump: Consensys CEO

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SEC crypto cases will be ‘dismissed or settled’ under Trump: Consensys CEO

The crypto industry is “going to save hundreds of millions of dollars” with Donald Trump as president, Consensys CEO Joe Lubin forecasts.

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‘Crypto Dad’ squashes rumors that he could replace Gensler as SEC Chair

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<div>'Crypto Dad' squashes rumors that he could replace Gensler as SEC Chair</div>

Former CFTC Acting Chair Chris Giancarlo said he’s “already cleaned up earlier Gary Gensler mess,” shooting down speculation he’d replace the SEC Chair.

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