Election silence
Election silence or election blackout is the practice of banning political campaigning or media coverage of a general election, before or during that election. Often, the publication of opinion polls is illegal during this time.
Operation
In some jurisdictions, such as Slovenia, Poland and Nepal, it is forbidden to try to convince people to vote for a specific candidate or political party on the day of election.Some jurisdictions have declared that, legally, election silence violates the right to freedom of speech. However, some countries use it to "balance out the campaigning and maintain a free voting environment". The goal is to give voters a chance to reflect, free of external pressures, before casting their votes. During this period, no active campaigning by the candidates is allowed. Often polling is also banned.
List
Overview
Election silences are observed in:- Albania
- Armenia
- Argentina
- Australia
- Azerbaijan
- Bahrain
- Barbados
- Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Brazil
- Bulgaria
- Cambodia
- Canada
- Croatia
- Cyprus
- Czech Republic
- Egypt
- Fiji
- France
- Greece
- Hungary
- India
- Indonesia
- Ireland
- Israel Polls are banned for 5 days before the election. TV and radio ads are banned during campaign beside a concentrated bloc scheduled by the election committee around 2 weeks before the election.
- Italy, polling banned from 15 days before elections, it is prohibited to say the names of candidates on television in the month before elections
- Japan
- Kazakhstan
- Lebanon
- Malaysia
- Malta
- Moldova
- Montenegro
- Mozambique
- Nepal
- New Zealand.
- North Macedonia
- Pakistan
- Paraguay
- Peru
- Philippines
- Poland since 1991
- Portugal
- Russia
- Singapore called "cooling-off period"
- Serbia
- Slovakia
- Slovenia
- South Korea
- Spain called "reflection day". Polling is banned five days before election day, although there are some legal tricks, like publishing abroad
- Sri Lanka
- Taiwan
- Thailand
- Tunisia
- Turkey
- Ukraine
- United Kingdom; while polling stations are open, broadcast media cannot report on any campaign activity, and it is forbidden to publish an exit poll or anything resembling one until voting closes. However, candidates and parties can still campaign, and print and digital media have no additional reporting restrictions.
- Uruguay
By country
Bulgaria
The Constitutional Court of Bulgaria ruled in 2009 that both electoral silence and ban on opinion polls before the election day represented a violation of freedom of speech.Canada
It is not permitted to "transmit election advertising to the public in an electoral district on polling day before the close of all of the polling stations in the electoral district".Prior to the 2015 Canadian federal election, the distribution of election results in regions of the country where polls have not yet closed was banned, so results from ridings in the Eastern and Atlantic provinces would not influence results in the west. This was upheld as lawful in a 2007 decision of the Supreme Court, R v Bryan. In January 2012, the Government announced it would repeal the prohibition " does not make sense with the widespread use of social media and other modern communications technology", upon the urging of the then Chief Electoral Officer, Marc Mayrand. It was repealed by the Fair Elections Act on June 19, 2014.
Although media organisations are not permitted to be present for the count of results or to enter polling rooms, they may shoot video or photos from outside of a polling room as long as the secrecy of the ballot is maintained and access to the room is not impeded.
Between 1993 and 1998, the distribution of election surveys 74 hours before election day was banned. This was struck down by the Supreme Court of Canada as violating section 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms in Thomson Newspapers Co v Canada (AG).
Slovenia
The Constitutional Court of Slovenia ruled in 2011 that a ban on opinion polls was unconstitutional.Until 2016, any mention of the candidate on the day of election was prohibited. Those who published positive or critical statements about parties or candidates on social media, online forums, or stated them for example in restaurants, were prosecuted and fined. For over two decades, media and voters refrained from talking about politics on the day before the elections and on election day. In 2016, the Supreme Court ruled that "not every opinion is propaganda", published a new definition of the term 'propaganda' and reverted a lower court judgement, which convicted a person who published "Great interview! Worth reading!" on Facebook.