A total of 20 people in the Brighton Pavilion constituency did not return to vote after being turned away at the polling station at the recent general election, figures show.
Since May 2023, voters have needed to show photo ID to vote in UK parliamentary elections, and for local elections and referendums in England.
The move has proved controversial, with some groups saying it may make voting harder for younger people and ethnic minorities, who are less likely to have a valid form of photo ID.
New figures from the Electoral Commission show 65 voters were initially turned away from polling stations in Brighton Pavilion due to ID rules in the general election this July.
While 45 of these returned to vote, 20 did not.
The organisation cautions the true number may be higher than this, as some voters may have been told about the ID requirement by staff before they asked for a ballot, and therefore would not have been recorded as being turned away.
In total, 42,368 people voted at 44 polling stations in Brighton Pavilion.
Across Great Britain 50,000 people were initially turned away due to not having valid ID, with 16,000 people not returning to vote.
However, some polling stations did not submit data on the number of people unable to vote, so the true figure may be higher.
While this was a small proportion of the nearly 20 million people who voted at polling stations, the Electoral Commission warned some may have been put off voting by the new rules.
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