General Right to Vote
Electoral Law:
(15 January 1992)
See section 8, subsection (1)
Exclusion Based on Mental
Disability
Constitution:
(19 February 1973)
Article 42, section (1) disqualifies from appointments as Senators any
person who "
(f) is a person certified to be insane or otherwise adjudged
to be of unsound mind under any law in force in the Bahamas."
Article 48, section (1) disqualifies from membership in the House of
Assembly any person who "
(e) is a person certified to be insane or
otherwise adjudged to be of unsound mind under any law in force in the Bahamas."
Electoral Law:
(15 January 1992)
Section 8, subsection (3) states, "For the purposes of this Act,
a person who is a patient in any establishment maintained wholly or mainly for
the care of persons suffering from mental illness or mental defectiveness, or
who is detained in legal custody at any place, shall not by reason thereof be
treated as a resident there."
Under section 10 "Legal incapacities of voters," subsection
(2), "a person shall be deemed to be suffering from a legal incapacity
and shall not be entitled to apply for registration as a voter in any constituency
or to vote at any election (whether registered as a voter or not) -
(b)
while he is deemed to be a lunatic or of unsound mind by virtue of any finding
or declaration under any Act
"
Voter Assistance by Other
Citizens
Electoral Law:
(15 January 1992)
Article 63 concerns voting by "incapacitated persons." Section
(1) states "the presiding officer, on the application of any voter who
is incapacitated by blindness or any other physical cause from voting in the
manner prescribed by this act and who takes and subscribes an oath
in form
O
and is accompanied by a friend, shall permit such friend to accompany
the incapacitated voter into one of the compartments in the polling place and
mark such voter's ballot for him, but no person shall
be allowed to act
as the friend of more than one incapacitated voter."
Sections (2), (3) and (4) of the abovementioned Article 63 deal respectively
with the oath of the "friend," a list of incapacitated persons kept
by the presiding officer, and a statement that any "friend" who breaches
their oath "shall be guilty of an offence against this Act."
Included are Form O "Form of Oath to be taken by Incapacitated Voter"
and Form P "Form of Oath to be taken by Friend of Incapacitated Voter"
Included in list of equipment and personnel for a polling place are three
forms pertaining to people with disabilities: an oath to be taken by "challenged
voters", an oath to be taken by a blind or incapacitated voter, and an
oath to be taken by a friend of an incapacitated voter. p 2
Promotes Access
Poll Worker Manuals:
Aids to Returning Officers, Presiding Officers and Poll Clerks in Holding Elections
(1992)
Included in the list of articles to be present at the polling station
is the "disabled list", referring to the list of voters who are disabled
in some way. p 3
Indelible Ink Excusal
Electoral Law:
(15 January 1992)
Under Article 59 "Voting procedure," the normal procedure includes
marking the right thumb of the voter with indelible ink. However, subsection
(d) of section (1) states that "if the person has no right hand thumb or
if for any other reason it is
not practical to mark that thumb, the thumb
of the left hand or such other finger as the presiding officer shall direct
shall be so marked or if
it is not practicable to mark any finger of the
person, that person shall be marked in such a way as the presiding officer considers
sufficient to indicate that a ballot has been issued to that person."
Section (4) of the abovementioned Article 59 states that "where
the appropriate finder or any other finger which any voter may be required to
immerse in electoral ink is concealed or covered with any bandage or other material,
the presiding officer shall refuse to give to the voter any ballet paper unless
the voter either (a) removes such bandage
or
(2) satisfies the presiding
officer that he is suffering from injury to such appropriate or other finger
takes an oath to that effect in the prescribed form and makes one or more impressions
in ink on that form, as follows (i) with his right thumb; (ii) with his left
thumb, should he not have a right thumb; or (iii) with any other finger, should
he not have any thumb."