The jailbird vote
 
SIR – The prospect of allowing prisoners to vote in elections (report, Issue 
  1,110) raises the interesting question of where they would exercise their 
  franchise. 
Would someone from, say, Manchester, who was serving a life sentence in 
  Dartmoor, cast his ballot in his home town or in Devon, where he might be 
  spending the next several years?
Were all the prisoners in a rural jail (such as Dartmoor) to vote, this might 
  even skew the result of the election.
This, in turn, would almost certainly lead to the prospect of candidates 
  chasing the jailbird vote. 
Michael Stanford, London SE23 
Comment: Prisoners will cast a postal vote in the constituency they lived in prior to imprisonment.
I don't have a problem with MPs having to knock on prisoners cell doors. 
1 comment:
"I don't have a problem with MPs having to knock on prisoners cell doors."
That may not even be necessary John. They could be sharing the same cell.
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