@Steve , yep, think it just refers to registration being quicker online than by post.
Yes, it looks like "save time and do it online" is a government slogan, probably added to all correspondence regardless.
From The South Devon Alliance You Tube Channel; https://www.youtube.com/@wolboroughhills515 The YouTube version of the first Election Broadcast from Liam Mullone SDA make me your MP for anyone minded to share the message more widely. The South Devon Alliance candidate for Newton Abbot constituency in the General Election. Given Labour have it in the bag nationally, consider voting for Devon. ...
We cannot vote online in this country. Try a web search or just go straight to Gov.uk. https://www.gov.uk/how-to-vote
My problem is I don't have any photo id and so I can't vote in person. You don't need photo id for a postal vote, just a signature.
@Carer The South Devon Alliance is unsurprisingly based and run from S. Devon, based in Newton Abbot. Liam Mullone if elected as MP would represent us in Westminster. He'll make his voice heard alright if elected or not and he has been doing for 5 years in the District Council and has been a thorn in the side of Wrigley and the illiberal. undemocratic Lib Dems and their Tory allies. No doubt ...
I take it then that if Mr Mullone was our MP, he would not go to Westminster and run his constintuancy from his front room and not make his voice heard?
Voting online is so open to corruption. I too have postal voting due to my mobility issues but I would prefer to vote 'in person' at a polling station, otherwise it takes away the excitement and the personal service. IMO, far too may things are being done online now, doing away with the personal contact and interaction with other people.
From the South Devon Alliance website http://southdevonalliance.org/index.html #1 Serve Devon, Not London All other parties are run from Westminster, parroting policies created in the corridors of power by party bureaucrats. The attempts of our politicians to transplant Westminster dinner-party policies onto Devon have been an utter failure: ‘Levelling-up’ schemes that just ...
Thanks Dil, that makes sense.