Presidential Elections Act, 1937

Postal voters.

29.—(1) Every elector whose name is, at the time of a presidential election, on the postal voters' list for a constituency shall be entitled to vote in that constituency at the poll at such election by sending his ballot paper by post to the local returning officer for the said constituency and shall not be entitled to vote at such election in any other manner.

(2) Every local returning officer shall, as soon as practicable after he receives from the presidential returning officer notice of the adjournment of a presidential election for the purpose of taking a poll, send to every elector who is on the postal voters' list for his constituency a ballot paper and a declaration of identity in the prescribed form.

(3) If a ballot paper sent to an elector under the next preceding sub-section of this section is returned to the local returning officer duly marked by the said elector and is accompanied by the declaration of identity duly signed and authenticated and is received by such returning officer before the close of the poll, such ballot paper shall be treated and counted by such returning officer in the same manner as a ballot paper placed in the ballot box in the ordinary way.

(4) In sending out, receiving, and otherwise dealing with the ballot papers of postal voters, every local returning officer shall observe and comply with the law (so far as it is not inconsistent with this Act) for the time being regulating the sending out, receiving, and otherwise dealing with the ballot papers of postal voters at a Dáil election.