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I've just looked at Q's & A's (and also heard on the radio) that that one's voluntary 


17. What questions will I have to answer?

We ask about work, health, national identity, citizenship, ethnic background, education, second homes, language, religion, marital status and so on. People in Wales will have an extra question about the Welsh language. 

All these things are important in capturing a true snapshot of the population as it stands on census day. 

You must answer all the questions. Only the religion question is voluntary.

FM
Originally Posted by sproooot:
Originally Posted by Skylark24:
The census is apparently going to cost around 600 million, why at this time???? And is it really necessary?
And the only question that isn't compulsory is the religion one 
We havent got ours yet, but have read its in 56 diff languages, so that will be be some thump coming thru the letterbox, poor posties!
FM
Originally Posted by cologne 1:
I can't vote in the referendum. I'm only allowed to voice my view in a local election. I've been living in this country for 31 years. It seems a bit of a PC noncense not to let me have a voice.
It's not a referendum Col, it's a 'headcount' of peeps in the country. I would think you would be
FM
The Alternative Vote (AV) is very much like First-Past-the-Post (FPTP). Like FPTP, it is used to elect representatives for single-member constituencies, except that rather than simply marking one solitary 'X' on the ballot paper, the voter has the chance to rank the candidates on offer.
The voter thus puts a '1' by their first-preference candidate, and can continue, if they wish, to put a '2' by their second-preference, and so on, until they don't care anymore or they run out of names. In some AV elections, such as most Australian elections, electors are required to rank all candidates.
If a candidate receives a majority of first-preference votes (more people put them as number one than all the rest combined), then they are elected.
If no candidate gains a majority on first preferences, then the second-preference votes of the candidate who finished last on the first count are redistributed. This process is repeated until someone gets over 50 per cent.

FM

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