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What is Rigging In Election

In the context of a democratic system, election rigging—also known as electoral fraud—refers to the illegal interference with the process of an election. It involves a deliberate attempt to manipulate the outcome of a vote to ensure a specific candidate or party wins, or to increase or decrease the vote share of a particular contestant.

Rigging undermines the fundamental principle of “one person, one vote” and can lead to a loss of public trust in government institutions.

Common Methods of Election Rigging

Election rigging can occur at various stages, from registration period to final counting of ballots.

1. Voter Suppression and Intimidation

It involves preventing specific groups of people from voting. Techniques include:

2. Ballot Box Stuffing

One of most traditional forms of rigging, this occurs when individuals or officials deposit multiple fraudulent ballots into box for a preferred candidate.

3. Misuse of Technology (Hacking)

In era of Electronic Voting Machines (EVMs) and digital tallying, rigging can take form of:

4. Gerrymandering

This is practice of redrawing boundaries of electoral constituencies to give an unfair advantage to a particular party. By packing opposition voters into one district or cracking them across many, ruling party can dilute their influence.

5. Vote Buying

This involves offering money, goods (such as food or alcohol), or services to voters in exchange for their vote. While common, it is a direct violation of electoral integrity.

How to detecting election rigging?

Independent observers and statisticians often look for red flags that suggest an election may have been rigged:

Impact 

When elections are rigged, resulting government lacks political legitimacy. This can lead to:

To combat rigging, many countries use independent election commissions, biometric voter verification, and paper audit trails (like VVPAT) to ensure that every vote is recorded and counted accurately.

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