Paper
Ballots : Voting
A
Paper ballot systems employs uniform official ballots
of various stock weight on which the names of all candidates
and issues are printed. Voters record their choices,
in private, by marking the boxes next to the candidate
or issue choice they select and drop the voted ballot
in a sealed ballot box.
This
paper ballot system was first adopted in the Australian
state of Victoria in 1856, and in the remaining Australian
states over the next several years. The paper ballot
system thereafter became known as the "Australian
ballot." New York became the first American State
to adopt the paper ballot for statewide elections in
1889.
As
of 1996, paper ballots were still used by 1.7% of the
registered voters in the United States. They are used
as the primary voting system in small communities and
rural areas, and quite often for absentee balloting in
other jurisdictions.
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