That is a very good idea, this media blackout.
In the US we sometimes get depressed turnout in the western parts of the country when the polls close in the eastern parts hours in advance, and the news starts reporting and calling states for one side or the other.
Purple wrote:Because there is more to it than your experience as a voter. Imagine being in charge of organizing all those sites, hiring all the workers, making sure everything is in place and ready and everyone gets those little cards shipped to them AND properly marked.
Yes, but much of this process can be automated, or is done exactly the same way every time.
And how would you go about "simplifying" the process, anyway? Just having fewer sites for voters to go wouldn't help, because you'd just need twice as many people at each site to compensate for having twice as many voters show up. And things like making sure there is adequate parking space and access to public transportation would get worse, not better.
If you rely on people mailing in ballots, that's simple but it takes a lot of time for the ballots to be physically delivered to the right place. This isn't normally a problem, but can
create a problem if it is desirable to know the outcome of the election quickly.
If you use some kind of electronic voting system, you have a great many security issues to resolve, and you still have a lot of IT work to do to make things go well.