26-08-2013, 04:59 PM
I like the principles behind e-voting, but there are a couple of issues. Motions are quite frequently amended after discussion, and part of the point of an AGM is for people to talk about options, listen to each other's points and reach a conclusion. It's not simply a day for votes to be counted.
To take one example (and this doesn't really answer Andrew McHarg's point, but does at least illustrate one difference), David's decision to change his vote and the disposal of his proxies based on the events of the day when the same candidacy recurred, is I believe entirely legitimate, but it's difficult to see how that sort of responsiveness to developments could be built in to an e-voting system.
To take one example (and this doesn't really answer Andrew McHarg's point, but does at least illustrate one difference), David's decision to change his vote and the disposal of his proxies based on the events of the day when the same candidacy recurred, is I believe entirely legitimate, but it's difficult to see how that sort of responsiveness to developments could be built in to an e-voting system.