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I鈥檓 a bouncer but don鈥檛 ask me to evict students from polling booths

Will those charged with telling students that their student union card is not an approved form of ID for voting be branded fascists, wonders George Bass

Published on
April 12, 2023
Last updated
April 12, 2023
Security staff stand at the polling station to illustrate I鈥檓 a bouncer, but don鈥檛 ask me to evict students from polling booths
Source: Getty

At the university where I鈥檓 based, several of the campus security team, myself included, are licensed bouncers. The training can be useful in a job that mixes high-profile public functions such as ushering at graduation ceremonies with policing the consequences of the student union鈥檚 two-for-拢10 offers on murder-mystery 鈥渋nheritance鈥 cocktails.

When your hourly rate is than that of Matt Hancock, you have to take on as much extra work as you can in a cost-of-living crisis. And according to recent headlines, bouncers might soon be required to聽聽and check voters for photo ID. It sounds initially like a nice little earner. But, on reflection, I鈥檇 relish doing that in a student town even less than I relish carrying the trays at the senior management team鈥檚 finger buffet.

Although everyone expects to be treated with respect in their job, I鈥檓 aware I聽might experience something less than impeccable manners when dealing with unreasonable people. Still, I鈥檓 not too keen on being branded a fascist. I know that accusation will fly when we have to start enforcing the UK鈥檚 upcoming (cue a thousand 鈥渃hemistry experiment鈥 excuses from students). But it will surely fly even more indignantly when I have to explain to a would-be student voter that their student union card as official photo ID. Being dragged into heated political sparring isn鈥檛 what I signed up for.

Government guidelines mention passports, driving licences and proof-of-age cards, . But in my experience, students routinely carry none of the above. Indeed, many don鈥檛 even carry their student cards; I鈥檝e lost count of the number of times we鈥檝e asked to retain ID as collateral for a secure key and been told 鈥淚鈥檝e only got my phone鈥.

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Dealing with drunk law students has taught me to keep up with legislation, so I鈥檝e done some googling to find out why exactly guards are being sent to the scout huts and church halls that are requisitioned as polling stations. It doesn鈥檛 make sense. Photo ID is apparently being phased in to create 鈥溾, according to the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities. But the Electoral Reform states that 鈥渋n 2019, there were only 33 allegations of impersonation at the polling station, out of over 58 million votes cast鈥. According to my calculator app, that's a 0.00006 per cent fraud rate. And to combat it聽by means of聽photo ID is going to cost an estimated 拢180 million per decade. If I pick up polling duty and get that statistic chucked at me by an angry student voter, I鈥檓 not sure what the appropriate response is.

Many students are aware that their future is looking less secure with every headline. That鈥檚 why I can understand why Manchester students recently borrowed from the same playbook as striking lecturers, barristers, teachers, train drivers, doctors and Amazon workers and went on a . The footage of students being carried out of their residential blocks by High Court bailiffs gave me flashbacks to my physical intervention training; I fear it鈥檚 only a matter of time before I鈥檓 required to call upon mine again.

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What concerns me most is if an undergrad flash mob tries to occupy the polling station in protest at perceived voter suppression. If they do, I definitely won鈥檛 be sitting on them or sticking them in handcuffs, as civilian security staff recently did to a聽 in a shop in Liverpool. Maybe I could shut them up by putting bins over their heads: if it鈥檚 good enough for an election candidate like Lord Buckethead鈥

But how many students will even turn up at the polling station, you ask. Well, it is true that young people are than other age groups and, while the insomniac students who wend their lonely way to the security counter during weekends, bank holidays and other quiet times do sometimes want to talk politics, they often assert that the system is rigged and ask whether voting is even worth it.

The mischievous part of me has always been tempted 鈥 especially if they鈥檙e American studies candidates 鈥 to recite the Mark Twain meme I saw once: 鈥淚f voting made any difference, they wouldn鈥檛 let us do it.鈥 But apparently that鈥檚 a misquote.

Another part of me wants to tell them that, 17 years ago, the government to bring in free ID cards. This would have meant that paying for a passport or driving licence (or going online to arrange a printed verification certificate) wouldn鈥檛 be necessary. Like getting into the student bar, they鈥檇 just have to show their card, step behind the curtain and promise to behave themselves.

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But the world of 2006 seems a very long way away now. So I instead ask students how they think voting should work these days 鈥 and the passionate response from several has been that they should be able to vote by text. If phones are secure enough to let users check into a flight, change energy providers or pay their rent with a few swipes, why can鈥檛 they exercise their right to democracy in the same way?

It鈥檚 an argument that鈥檚 hard to disagree with. Text voting might be a gift to Russian hackers, but, personally, I鈥檇 be happy to pass on the security headache to GCHQ 鈥 even if it denies us bouncers some much-needed overtime.

George Bass is a security guard at a UK university.

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Reader's comments (2)

George, you are more eloquent and better informed than many students and academics - you deserve a pay rise!
I totally agree with the first comment. Just to add that the same motivation for voter ID as in the USA is behind the new law here; i.e., voter suppression of those less likely to vote for the party in favour of voter ID. C/F the rules on Oyster cards as acceptable ID.

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