CONTINUED REFORM The Second Reform Act was only one of several major changes in the electoral system that were introduced in the latter half of the nineteenth century. In 1872, a secret ballot was introduced for parliamentary elections for the first time, overcoming the age-old argument that open voting was more 'manly'. In 1883, the Corrupt and Secret Practices Act imposed restrictions on election expenses, among other measures designed to make elections fairer. In 1884, the Third Reform Act extended the franchise to miners and agricultural workers - who had been excluded from the 1863 Act. And in 1885 the Redistribution of Seats Act finally solved the problem of over and under representation, by introducing mostly single-member constituencies.