HAND
Armchair Philosopher
There appears to be a run on the pound at this very moment... 6% down since the Sunderland result..
There appears to be a run on the pound at this very moment... 6% down since the Sunderland result..

Why do the British take so long to count votes? It seems they don't expect a definitive result for quite a while, although the first couple of places that traditionally count their votes quickly have just done so. I remember this from the UK general election last year, too: results were slowly trickling in all the way until mid-morning UK time. The voting system is literally as simple as it gets, so I'd think they'd be as fast as the US or Canada.
The short answer has to be paper ballots.
Think about it this way - if you have paper ballots, you at least have physical evidence to support the result. (Unless LBJ has them buried, anyway.) The advantage of computerizing voting is that you can count things a whole lot faster; the disadvantage is that you have to trust the integrity of the computer system.
I have never cast a ballot on a computerized system.
I disagree, I think it's sensible to judge political stuff (like referendum issues or candidates) based on their supporters. None of this stuff exists in a vacuum - 'the merits' of something can definitely include the, like, process of it. One of the major reasons I started out strongly supporting Bernie Sanders but became much more half-hearted about him over time, is that I realized lots of his supporters are about as odious as a lot of Trump supporters.
I can't quite put into words why I thought that mattered, but it did matter to me. An English guy I know recently said that he inclines toward Remain, but even had he inclined toward Leave he would not have been able to bring himself to vote for it due to how horrible he thought the Leave campaign was, with all the lies, racism, xenophobia and so forth.
We have paper ballots of some form (including punch cards) in many if not the majority of jurisdictions, but most are optically readable and are fed into a machine to be recorded electronically. What I've looked up, the standard in Illinois is that 5% of precincts are randomly selected to also have a hand count performed to ensure there are no systematic issues, along with hand counts of obvious anomalies. We also have many small precincts rather than more large ones, and each precinct is usually only a few hundred votes, so even where hand counts are done, they're quick in most precincts. But yeah, if the Brits are doing it entirely old school and if they have a small number of large counting stations rather than a large number of small ones, I could see why it would take them longer.The short answer has to be paper ballots.
Think about it this way - if you have paper ballots, you at least have physical evidence to support the result. (Unless LBJ has them buried, anyway.) The advantage of computerizing voting is that you can count things a whole lot faster; the disadvantage is that you have to trust the integrity of the computer system.
Why do the British take so long to count votes? It seems they don't expect a definitive result for quite a while, although the first couple of places that traditionally count their votes quickly have just done so. I remember this from the UK general election last year, too: results were slowly trickling in all the way until mid-morning UK time. The voting system is literally as simple as it gets, so I'd think they'd be as fast as the US or Canada.

that is not an either/or propositionOn the flip side, we don't have election campaigns that run for literally years in the run up to general elections. I know which I prefer![]()
Why do the British take so long to count votes?
I'd love to see the EU's structures get dismantled and rebuilt from the ground up, but nobody thinks that would happen if countries just started voting to leave it. Instead there'd just be no coherent organization of the European states and little will to try again.
You're definitely talking about me. Good to see that I've made an impression, at least.

if the Home Islands vote Leave but the imperial possessions vote Remain does that mean that Britain secedes from the Empire

oh you teaseIt wasn't a proposition at all.
When our votes are counted by hand, we usually do have locals in thousands of small precincts of a few hundred voters each who do the tallying. That's both pretty fast - even one person can tally up a few hundred votes in an hour or so, although there should of course be multiple people to verify the totals - and involves total hand counting of ballots.Counting by hand and leaving the job to local people who are not professionals of this kind of thing? I'm happy to wait hours or even a day if that is what it takes to prevent the possibility of fraud and any suspicions of it.
Hopefully that's correct - a series of looser international agreements could be instituted that would preserve national sovereignty while avoiding a total collapse in intra-European trade and excessive restrictions on travel. Then again though, large political movements develop momentum of their own and it's virtually impossible to predict what will happen if the dam breaks and the Euro or the whole EU collapses. A return to nationalism and protectionism is quite possible, although I doubt there will be any invasions of Belgium or Poland this time around.I don't see "further union" happening in this EU. I don't see the Euro lasting much longer, because by now it is obvious that the one-size-fits all creates "structural" losers and winners among the countries that joined that currency: they'll start leaving, probably Finland first. But I also don't see Europe going back to border controls and high tariffs separating trade and movement between its closer countries. Something will succeed this EU, I don't believe it will be an European federation, but it won't be a collection of autarky either.
I definitely agree about that axis - differentiation of politicians along that dimension seems to be the biggest recent trend in the Western world, with the populists currently ascendant. Back in the 1990s and early 2000s, there weren't many populists to speak of, but now the discontent with the policies enacted by the politicians of that period is reaching critical mass. But the majority of that mass seems to be coming from the populist right, and that's a group with some really scary elements. After a long boring period, it seems we do now live in interesting times.We had the left vs. right thing, and then someone added an authoritarian vs. libertarian axis to produce a 2D graphic and called it the "political compass". But we can fit at least one other axis orthogonal to these two: populism vs. elitism.
Left or right, libertarian or authoritarian, ideologies have also split between the idea of a few leading (or pushing...) the masses (elitism) and the idea of moving only with the support of the masses.