Constitutional lawyer Hermann Escarrá said that the minutes of the vote count are those that the National Electoral Council (CNE) must “publish and display.”
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But before continuing, he explained the difference between the counting minutes and the totalization minutes.
“The scrutiny report is coincidentally the one that contains the process by which the results of the table were counted and issued,” he explained.
While the “totalization report is different. It basically contains the sum of the vote counting reports, which is sent to the National Electoral Board, or to the regional electoral boards, or to the municipal electoral boards, as the case may be. For this purpose, a totalization commission is appointed,” added Escarrá.
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“The public nature of the voting records and their publication and display is discussed, which has nothing to do with the 30-day period that, we repeat, the National Electoral Council has to give the electoral results,” said Escarrá.
Time, which according to Escarra, is established in article 155 of the Organic Law of Electoral Processes (previously 125).
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“This publication is normally made in the Electoral Gazette, in accordance with article 395 of the Regulations. In both regulations, those of legal rank and those of sublegal rank, there is no mention of minutes, only of electoral results, which is ultimately the obligation that the National Electoral Council would have in the above-mentioned period,” he concluded.
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2024-08-14 23:56:40