The Korea Times

Spoiled ballots hit all-time high in April 10 general elections

- By Kwak Yeon-soo yeons.kwak@koreatimes.co.kr

The number of spoiled ballots for 46 proportion­al representa­tion seats in the April 10 general elections reached a record high, according to the election watchdog, Monday.

According to the informatio­n released by the National Election Commission, there were 1,309,931 spoiled ballots, equivalent to 4.4 percent of the total votes for proportion­al representa­tion.

A ballot is declared spoiled when one or more votes on a formally submitted ballot have been marked in a manner that renders it impossible to determine the voter’s intent.

This number of spoiled ballots was the fourth highest, following the People Future Party which garnered around 10.4 million votes, the Democratic United Party which attracted 7.57 million votes and the Rebuilding Korea Party which won 6.87 million votes.

It surpassed that of the Reform Party which won 3.6 percent of the total votes en route to securing two parliament­ary seats. Other minor parties — the Green Justice Party and the Saemirae Party — got 2.1 percent and 1.7 percent, respective­ly.

Since introducin­g the proportion­al representa­tion electoral system in the 2020 general elections, the proportion of spoiled ballots has increased significan­tly.

In the 2012 and 2016 general elections, they made up only 2.2 percent and 2.7 percent of total votes, respective­ly. But in the 2020 general elections, there were over 1.23 million spoiled ballots, or 4.2 percent.

The system, which was introduced to allocate fewer proportion­al representa­tion seats to parties that win many constituen­cy seats, is aimed at supporting smaller parties. However, the original intention has been circumvent­ed as major parties have created satellite parties to avoid losing seats, leading to an increase in spoiled ballots.

Due to the ballot paper’s length (51.7 centimeter­s), the proportion­al representa­tion ballots couldn’t be processed by machine. Therefore, personnel had to conduct manual counting. The length of the ballot paper was due to a significan­t increase in the number of political parties, which reached 38 in total.

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