RNIB campaigns to improve voting access for blind and partially sighted people
The Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB) has stated that blind and partially sighted people are being denied democracy due to an inability to vote without assistance, with the 2024 general election to be the last election where this is the case.
An open letter to the next prime minister, which has been signed by celebrities including former England footballer Michael Owen, cyclist Lora Fachie, and journalist and disability campaigner Lucy Edwards, emphasises that “voting is a fundamental right and part of living in a democratic society.”
The letter goes on to state that it is a “scandal” that more than 150 years after the right to vote in secret became law, blind and partially sighted people are still having to share their vote.
The RNIB’s Turned Out report found that only 13 per cent of blind people felt they could vote independently and in secret in the 2019 general election.
Most had to be assisted by a companion or polling staff member, meaning they could not make their vote confidential.
Anna Tylor, RNIB’s chair of trustees, said that the legal right to vote in secret has been in place for over 150 years, “but this right still isn’t afforded to many of the two million blind and partially sighted people like me who face significant barriers to voting independently.”
Tylor noted that polling stations are required to have a tactile voting device and large print copy of the ballot paper for reference, but that “voting remains a fundamentally visual exercise.”
Although voting solutions with audio elements and those that combine audio and tactile elements do exist, they are not widely available, Tylor said, adding that people with sight loss have to proactively request them. It is then up to local electoral officials whether they can obtain them.
“We’ve heard from blind and partially sighted people that they have often had to make their choices out loud, robbing them of their secret vote, leading to discomfort and uncertainty about whether their vote was cast as intended,” Tylor said.
She noted that 42 per cent of blind respondents to RNIB’s Turned Out survey said they had been dissatisfied with their experience of voting at the 2019 general election.
Combined audio and tactile devices are mentioned in guidance as possible voting equipment but are not part of the minimum standard and are only provided upon request, the RNIB said, with many blind and partially sighted people unaware that they exist.
The minimum standard of equipment in polling stations is largely the same as in 2019, the charity said, adding that at the time a judge called existing provisions “a parody of the electoral process.”
The RNIB has asked electoral officials whether they can provide audio devices to blind voters and has had confirmation that they will not be widely available at the general election on 4 July, Tylor explained, “which will mean yet again voters having to share their vote.”
“We are urging the next government to change this – make voting accessible so blind and partially sighted people, like me, can finally cast our vote independently and in secret,” she said.
The open letter also emphasises the importance of a blind or partially sighted person being able to “turn up to their polling station on the day and vote independently, without having to make requests themselves in advance, just like anyone else.”
In recent news, the RNIB launched an all-terrain cane which aims to change the game for blind and partially sighted cane users.