New districts, no more Senators, and 'None of the Above'... After the most major shake-up to the island's electoral system in history, new figures have shown that very little changed when it came to getting islanders to polling stations.
In fact, voter turnout actually dropped compared to the previous election.
There were 25,264 ballots cast in the election out of 60,678 islanders registered, making the voter turnout 41.6%, nearly two percentage points less than in 2018, according to figures released by Vote.je yesterday afternoon.
The turnout in the previous election had been 43.4%.
As a percentage, the turnout for Deputies was highest in the constituency of Grouville and St. Martin (51.6%) – where Carolyn Labey, Steve Luce and Rose Binet were elected - and lowest in the constituency of St. Helier Central (28.8%) – where Reform candidates, Carina Alves, Rob Ward, Catherine Curtis, Lyndsay Feltham and Geoff Southern, swept up all five seats.
Overall, the turnout for Connétable elections was of 39.8%.
St. Mary reached the highest turnout with 53.1% whilst St. Helier had the lowest with 32.4%. In those parishes, David Johnson and Simon Crowcroft were elected respectively.
Pictured: There were a total of 4,427 postal votes cast in the Deputies and Connétable elections.
2,252 and 2,175 postal votes were returned in the Deputies and Connétables elections respectively, with 529 in the St. Helier Connétable election alone.
The Connétable election in St. Helier also saw a high number of pre-poll ballots, 643, over five times more than in St. Saviour where only 124 were cast before election day.
A total of 259 and 279 voters required home visits for the Connétable and Deputies elections respectively. In the latter, only two voters in St. Helier Central required home visits, with 68 in the district of St. John, St. Lawrence and Trinity.
The number of spoilt ballots was under five across all districts and parishes, with a total of 33 across both elections. There were also a total of 26 ‘doubtful’ ballots as well as 71 rejected postal ballots.
A total of 340 of invalid ballots were also found, the majority of which (213) in the Connétables election. 79 of those were found in the parish of St. Helier, with another 43 in St. Brelade.
The district of St. Brelade had the highest number of registered voters with 8,043, followed by St. John, St. Lawrence and Trinity with 8,001, and St. Saviour with 7,683.
Meanwhile, St. Helier South and St. Helier Central had the smallest amount of registered voters with 5,025 and 5,306.
The latest figures are unlikely to improve Jersey’s ranking in voter turnout in Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the ‘Better Life Index’.
In the index, which aims to measure a nation’s wellbeing and progress, Jersey’s political engagement ranked lowest out of 41 countries earlier this year.
Pictured: Jersey ranked 24th out of 41 nations, five places lower than in 2019, in the most recent survey.
In 2019, the island had already ranked lower than all OECD member and partner countries in civic engagement (measured by voter turnout) with a score of zero.
The loss of the island-wide mandate was one of the most controversial features of the 2022 election, and some politicians believe that the return of the island-wide mandate would offer a solution to poor engagement.
Just hours after being elected Deputies of super-district St. Mary, St. Peter and St. Ouen, former Senators Ian Gorst and Lyndon Farnham launched a bid to get their old island-wide roles back.
Pictured: Deputies Gorst and Farnham worked together on a proposal to bring back the island-wide mandate in 2026.
“We were repeatedly told by voters that they were unhappy at the loss of the Senators and wished to see their return at the next election," said Deputy Gorst.
“Indeed, in my 17 years as a States Member, which has taken me through six elections, I have never known any single issue to be raised with such frequency when talking with voters on the doorstep. I understand that this was reflected in most, if not all, of the other electoral districts."
He has put forward an in-principle proposal for debate by States Members at the start of the new States Assembly term following the summer recess.
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