Weather Hits Nice Elections: Ballot Damage Prompts Immediate Reprint Effort

March 14, 2026
Weather Hits Nice Elections: Ballot Damage Prompts Immediate Reprint Effort
  • The electoral control commission visited the site, and measures were taken to ensure the vote proceeds as planned, with no postponement at this stage.

  • A reprinting effort was launched to supply enough voting materials for election day in response to the degraded ballots.

  • Overall, the issue is being managed through reprinting and redistribution without delaying the first-round electoral process.

  • Imprinting companies were instructed to restart production in coordination with the affected candidates, under direction of the municipality.

  • Authorities reassured that the electoral process and schedules would remain intact despite the ballot damage.

  • There was no provided detail on the number of polling stations affected or any delays to voting hours beyond the standard schedule.

  • Authorities promptly dispatched the departmental election control commission to the scene and initiated reprinting of damaged ballots.

  • Printers would re-run to print replacement ballots, and damaged ballots would be redistributed to polling stations by the Sunday opening time.

  • The prefecture of Alpes-Maritimes and the mairie confirmed rapid reprint of the damaged ballots to be completed by Sunday morning and redistributed before polling stations open.

  • A weather-related incident damaged between a fifth and a quarter of municipal ballots in Nice during the first round of local elections, prompting immediate action.

  • Officials emphasized the incident would not jeopardize the organization or conduct of the first round, with about 228,000 registered voters in Nice affected.

  • Nice has 228,006 registered voters, and the damage occurred while the city was under yellow weather vigilance for rain and floods.

Summary based on 3 sources


Get a daily email with more World News stories

Sources

More Stories