Brazil has been using electronic voting machines since 1996. The ballots are used for both local and national elections, and the 2005 disarmament referendum.
You don't get any receipt to check later (aside from the one that proves you voted, because voting is mandatory), and yet I don't remember the population ever distrusting the electronic system.
TV covers the election with up-to-the-minute results as the ballots are closed, and the winner is known on the same day, which is a nice plus.
You don't get any receipt to check later (aside from the one that proves you voted, because voting is mandatory), and yet I don't remember the population ever distrusting the electronic system.
TV covers the election with up-to-the-minute results as the ballots are closed, and the winner is known on the same day, which is a nice plus.