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Swiss abroad voted differently – but many could not 

Voting is made easy for him: A voter submits his election documents to the Bündner municipality of Medel/Lucmagn. There the urn is driven to the voters. Keystone

Swiss citizens abroad had the right to take part in Sunday’s parliamentary elections, but many could not. Their frustration is palpable, as swissinfo.ch reader comments and social media reactions reveal. 

The right to vote theoretically belongs to all Swiss people. In reality, many Swiss voters did not get their ballot box in time. 

The situation was particularly bad this year because several cantons did away with e-voting in response to public concerns over the security of voting online.  

The dilemma is that the credibility of Swiss democracy suffers one way or another.  

To get a better picture of the scale of the problem, we are asking our Swiss abroad readers to share their experiences. Did the ballot papers reach you in time? We asked for as much feedback as possible to get a sense of which countries faced more problems and where the process went smoothly. 

The effects of scrapping e-voting 

The Organisation of the Swiss Abroad (OSA) evaluated the participation rate of Swiss abroad in 2015 and 2019 elections, looking specifically at the cantons that had e-voting and gave it up. 

Their figures show a sharp decline in the participation of Swiss abroad voters following the abolition of e-voting. 

  • In canton Geneva, participation fell from 32% to 21%.  
  • In canton Lucerne, participation dropped from 32.1% to 23.4%. 
  • In Basel City it went from 26% to 19.2%.  

When compared to the referendums of 19 May 2019, the organisation also noticed that other cantons that had previously offered e-voting  (Aarau, Lucerne and Vaud) recorded roughly a 10% drop in the turnout. 

Different voting patterns 

The electoral behaviour of Swiss abroad has been a focal point of political analyses in these and past elections. 

Our own survey looking at the available data of ten cantons suggests that Swiss voters living abroad have a much stronger preference for the Green Party and less for the Swiss People’s Party.  

If only the Swiss abroad had voted, the Greens would have had a remarkable 25% of the votes, compared to the 13.2% they scored at home. 

+++ SEEKING INPUT FROM SWISS VOTERS ABROAD  +++

Where do you live? Did you receive the 🗳 slips in time? Leave us a comment! We will use the results to map the trouble spots and where things went smoothly.


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