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  2. Elections in the Philippines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elections_in_the_Philippines

    In 2016, for the third time in a row, the Philippines automated their elections using electronic vote counting machines. The deployment of 92,500 of these machines was the largest in the world. Brazil and India, countries which also use technology to process their votes, employ e-voting instead of an automated count. [5]

  3. Electronic voting by country - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_voting_by_country

    In October 2001 electronic voting was used for the first time in an Australian parliamentary election. In that election, 16,559 voters (8.3% of all votes counted) cast their votes electronically at polling stations in four places. [17] The Victorian State Government introduced electronic voting on a trial basis for the 2006 State election. [18]

  4. Vote counting in the Philippines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vote_counting_in_the...

    In 2016, for the third time in a row, the Philippines automated their elections using electronic vote counting machines. The deployment of 92,500 of these machines was the largest in the world. Brazil and India, countries which also use technology to process their votes, employ e-voting instead of an automated count.

  5. Smartmatic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smartmatic

    The e-voting system, the largest run by any European Union country, [65] was first introduced in 2005 for local elections, and was subsequently used in the 2007, 2011 and 2015 parliamentary elections, with the proportion of voters using this voting method rising from 5.5 per cent to 24.3 per cent to 30.5 per cent respectively.

  6. Electronic voting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_voting

    The functions of electronic voting depends primarily on what the organizers intent to achieve. In general, two main types of e-voting can be identified: e-voting which is physically supervised by representatives of governmental or independent electoral authorities (e.g. electronic voting machines located at polling stations);

  7. Party-list representation in the House of Representatives of ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Party-list_representation...

    While the House is predominantly elected by a plurality voting system, known as a first-past-the-post system, party-list representatives are elected by a type of party-list proportional representation. The 1987 Constitution of the Philippines created the party-list system. Originally, the party-list was open to underrepresented community ...

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  9. Commission on Elections (Philippines) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commission_on_Elections...

    Just six weeks before the 2016 Philippine general election, the COMELEC website was hacked by a group called "Anonymous Philippines" on the night of March 27, 2016. [21] Anonymous Philippines asked the poll body to implement security on Precinct Count Optical Scanners (PCOS)—automated voting machines. [22]