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It looks like Twitter and Facebook helped increase the amount of people registered to vote in the UK General Election

David Cameron
UK Prime Minister David Cameron. Reuters/Darren Staples

The 2015 UK General Election marks the first time the general public has been able to register to vote online.

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It's an important step. Beforehand, voters needed to send off a form in the post. That form can easily get lost, people procrastinate, and the task can be put off.

This year Twitter and Facebook are among the companies that have been encouraging the general public to get themselves registered. And it has paid off.

Some 2.75 million people have registered to vote online this year. That's more than 10% of the 27.1 million people that voted at the last General Election in 2010. Those stats are from Bruce Daisley, Twitter's vice president of Europe, who was presenting at The Financial Times' FT Digital Media conference in London on Tuesday.

Of course, not all of those 2.75 million online registrations will be additive to the total. Many people (this author included) simply registered online because it was easier.

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But there's little doubt the new process has worked to prompt people to ote who otherwise may have forgotten.

Daisley highlighted that Twitter embedded messages within its platform to encourage people in the UK to register to vote as time ticked down towards the deadline.

Here's the message UK Twitter users saw with a week to go.

Twitter online registration
Bruce Daisley/Twitter

And this chart shows how registrations really spiked on the last day:

Twitter online registration
Bruce Daisley/Twitter
And here's the net result of everyone's efforts:

Twitter registrations
Bruce Daisley/Twitter

Daisley said: "Opinion polls don't take this into account, that 10% of the electorate has been added through online registration."

After TV, the internet has overtaken newspapers to become the second biggest single media by which people receive news, Daisley said.

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And the impact of Twitter, especially among young people, is becoming bigger: "34% of 18 to 34-year-olds say they have had their opinion changed on who to vote for by Twitter," Daisley said.

Political parties have also been paying for Twitter ads. Daisley didn't mention which parties, or how much they spent (beyond that they were spending less on Twitter advertising than political parties in the US,) but he said that some of the minority parties including the Green Party and the Scottish National Party have been "over-punching their weight using the platform."

However, Daisley probably meant their organic use of the platform, here, rather than through paid-for Twitter campaigns.

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