Home > 1.3.2.2.2 Distance voting > REPUBLIC OF MOLDOVA - Joint Opinion on the Draft Electoral Code
 
 
 
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Paragraph 59
 

Voting abroad is a sensitive topic in Moldova and in many other OSCE and CoE member states especially where there is a sizable diaspora. In a previous opinion, the Venice Commission and ODIHR summarised the European standards on voting abroad in the following way: The trend in recent decades has been for more European states to allow voting from abroad in national elections. While there is no international standard regulating the right for citizens residing abroad to vote in national elections, changes to such existing provisions should nonetheless be subject to the same stability requirements as other provisions on the right to vote. In its case law, the ECtHR has awarded states a wide margin of appreciation under Article 3 Protocol 1 and has accepted restrictions in voting rights for citizens residing abroad, in particular with residence requirements. It appears from this case law that the test under Article 3 Protocol 1 concerning voting abroad is whether or not there has been an arbitrary or unreasonable restriction on the right to vote. In other words, while the state is free to decide whether or not to allow voting from abroad, if voting from abroad is allowed, restrictions stemming from organizational matters should be justified. Allowing citizens residing abroad to vote entails organisational challenges, which may justify certain restrictions in the exercise of the right to vote. Limiting the number of polling stations or restricting voting to embassies or consulates may be necessary due to the extra cost and resources required for organising elections abroad as well as the limitations imposed by the host countries.