Elections on
single day, in single phase
* The expanded banking system
will help the Election Commission conduct voting for General elections on
single day and in single phase. The expanded banking system with all working modules is
available on the website - www.vijayavarma.com
* All elections from panchayats
to Parliament can be conducted with the help of expanded banking system with
minimum cost and without rigging and impersonate voting.
* In expanded banking system
there will be a bank branch in every village or colony having a population of
2,500.
* Every citizen above the age
of 15 years will have one compulsory Main Savings Account in the banks. Each
individual will have only one Main Savings Account. There will be no
possibility of generating duplicate Main Savings Accounts for the same
person. Individual can have any number of Sub Savings Accounts if he wishes.
There is no limit for having Sub Savings Accounts for each individual but
there will be only one Main Savings Account for each individual above the age
of 15 years.
* Each bank branch will handle
approximately 2000 Main Savings Accounts.
* All citizens above the age of
18 years as recorded in their Main Savings Account will have voting rights
automatically.
* All banks are connected to
central servers maintained by Central bank. All citizens’ finger prints’ data
will be stored in Central Bank servers.
* Citizens need not enrol their
names in voter lists as in the present system. All citizens will get into
voter lists once they get the age of 18.
* No government machinery is
needed to enrol citizens in voter lists.
* There will be no possibility
of complaints from voters for non inclusion of their names in voter lists
* The banks will submit the
list of all individuals above the age of 18 years according to the Main
Savings Accounts handled by each bank branch to the Election Commission as
and when the Election Commission asks for it.
* As it is stated earlier there
will be a bank branch in every colony or village having population of 2500.
* Each bank branch premises
should have two huge rooms/partitions/floors/ blocks
* The one
room/partition/floor/block will be used for daily banking operations and the
second room/partition/block/floor in the same bank premises will be used as
polling booth for all elections from panchayats to Parliament, from general
elections to bye-elections
* In this second
room/partition/block/floor of every bank branch two voting machines are
placed permanently and in working condition
* These voting machines are
connected to the servers in the Central Election Commission
* The finger prints and images
of all voters [account holders whose age is above 18 years]
will be stored in the Central Election
Commission servers
*The voting machines will have two parts.
The upper part will have screen out side as in the ATMs. The lower part will
be empty
* On the screen of the upper
part of the voting machine there will be elections symbols of the contesting
candidates. These symbols will be in single row.
* The election symbols are same
in all voting machines of all branches that are situated in same
constituency.
* The symbols in the voting
machines may vary according to the contesting candidates in different
constituencies.
* These are designed to
register votes both digital recording and symbol printing on roll of paper
* Every machine will have
separate spools for all symbols. The roll of the paper spool should be 50
metres long and width of the roll should be 2 cm. The paper slip thickness
that is being used in the present ATMs is enough to this voting paper also.
*The entire roll of paper which
is 50 metres long should be divided into 2500 square parts. Each part on the
roll of paper is 2 cm width and 2 cm height.
* Inside the voting machines
these 8 spools are fixed in alignment of the symbols on the front screen of
the voting machine
* One square part of each spool paper can be
seen empty from outside.
* One square part of each spool
paper can be visible side by side in a single row through glass below each
symbol of contesting candidates.
* On the back side of each part
of this spool paper there will be serial numbers from 1 to 2500. These
numbers will not be visible to the voter.
* If there are more than 8
candidates contesting in constituency then there would be two voting
machines. To reduce the number of contestants and eliminate the non serious
contestants electoral reforms are required. See the web site - www.electoralreforms.net
* When a voter wants to cast
his vote he has to put his left hand on the symbol he wants to vote.
* The voting machine will scan
the fingers image, tally with the data at central servers and register his
choice of vote digitally inside the voting machine. The counting number of
each symbol will not be visible to the voter. But the cumulative number of
all votes on all symbols will be displayed on the voting machine [It can be
seen on the voting machine by the voter] Every time a vote is registered by
the voting machine the total number increase by one number.
*At the same the voting machine
will print a small symbol of the voter’s selected symbol on square part on
the symbol’s spool paper and the spool rolls 2 cm downwards.
* The voter will be able to see
the total digital vote recording of all symbols increase by one number and at
the same time his vote symbol printed on the empty part and the spool rolls 2
cm down in to lower part of the voting machine. Now the next empty square
part on the roll paper is seen.
*When the next voter arrives he
will see only empty square part on all spool papers. He will cast his vote
and comes out. All this happens in a few seconds for each voter.
* The voting machine will not
register the vote if the voter tries to put his hand on the machine second
time. It instantly sends out a warning siren. The security guards will take
him outside.
* There will be a screening
machine at the entrance of this polling room. This is not voting machine.
This is vote slip producing machine. Every voter before entering the room
will have to put his left hand on the screen of this machine. The machine
will scan the finger images, tally and
check with the stored data and produce small vote slip if the voter has an
account in that branch and if he did not vote already. The machine would not
produce a voter slip for second time for the same person. The voter slip
contains his name and account number.
* Then the voter will be
allowed into the voting room and should hand over the slip to the polling
official.
* The polling room should be
divided into three parts. In the first part the voting machines will be
placed. In the second part the polling officials will sit and in the third
part the polling agents of the contesting candidates will sit
* There will be screen board in
the polling room connected to the voting machines.
* The screen board will show
the total voter number at each vote cast. The total number will increase by
one number after each vote is registered
* When the voter cast his vote,
his name and voter number will be displayed on the board.
* The booth agents will mark
the voters’ names in their lists
* All the voting machines will
be connected to the central servers in the Central Election Commission.
* In this way the total number
of votes polled can be known according to booth wise, constituency wise,
state wise and country wide at every second.
*At the end of the day the
total number votes cast will be noted by the polling officials and polling
agents. The rooms will be sealed and cc video cameras will be active
monitoring the voting machines and whole inside of the voting room.
* The polling booth official
should hand over the collected voter slips to his higher authorities.
* The counting can be done the
next morning. There will be no need to move voting machines to counting
centres.
* The polling officials will
open the voting machine in the presence of polling agents and with full
coverage of cc video cameras. This entire process of counting should be made
public and put on the internet.
* Inside the machine the
digital recording of all symbols will be seen. The booth officials record the numbers of
all symbols. He would verify the digital number for each symbol recorded and
also the last printed number on back side of the roll of spool paper in the
presence of polling agents. The digital recording of the symbol and printing
number of the symbol should be same and would be the same. The total number
of vote’s registered and total individual votes of all symbols should be
same.
* The digital recording of all
votes will be connected to the constituency server and Central election
commission servers.
* This process can be completed
within half an hour.
* The final results can be
declared by the Central Election Commission within one hour on the counting
date.
* There is absolutely no
possibility for bogus voting, impersonate voting and rigging
* There will be no need for
booth officials to put a mark on voter’s finger and verify the voter lists.
* Voting will take less time.
There will be no long queues outside polling booths. Each voter enters the
polling booth, put his left hand on the symbol of his choice on the screen,
see his symbol printed on the roll paper and rolls down and returns back.
Voting is as simple as that.
* Elections can be conducted on
single day in single phase.
* The voting should be
conducted on bank holidays and staff of bank branches should be interchanged
for polling duty.
* The polling officials should
be paid double amount for working on this day.
* To oversee the polling other
government employees can be deputed as poll observers at each polling booth
[bank branch] one poll observer at each polling booth is necessary for smooth
conduct of elections.
To achieve 100% free and fair
elections the government should implement electoral and political reforms
See the website - www.electoralreforms.net
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Read full document of "Banking expanded to the ultimate level" on the website - www.vijayavarma.com
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General elections - voting on single day and in single phase
Thursday, December 25, 2014
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