Amused
Elite Member
- Apr 14, 2001
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We should do exactly the opposite. Only those people who demonstrate literacy and basic knowledge of math, science, and global politics should be allowed to vote. If a person can't point to America on a map, they can't vote.
Um, okaaaay...
Part of the problem is that quite a few people will vote D or R because that's what everyone said they should do. At the minimum they should reshuffle things so that straight party voting is a thing of the past. [/b]Then it takes at least ten seconds of thought to cast a ballot.[/b]
How is this enforced in Australia?
Do they put people in jail/prision who refuse to vote?
Do they fine them $1,000 dollars?
What is the repercussion? or did they just put "voting is mandatory" on the books without mentioning any punishment for violators?
Has compulsory voting proven to work? Does Australia have a 100% voter turnout? If not, then I assume the remaining people who didn't vote were either fined or put in prison?
Your idea would be impossible to enforce.
What if the voter only answers one ballot question of the 25 or so questions/votes of candidates on the list?
What if the voter bubbles all the ovals?
What if the voter answered "None of the Above" to every question?
What if the voter didn't answer any questions but there are pencil marks all over the ballot which is not enough to signify voter intent?
What if the voter voted in the primary, but not the general election?
What if the voter votes for local council elections but chooses not to participate in(or skips entirely over federal and state candidates running for office on the same ballot?
What if the voter is unemployed and therefore won't be able to receive your XX% discount on income tax?
What if the person is a college student who his parents claim him as dependent on their taxes meaning he doesn't have to file anything with the IRS? Would the XX% discount(or fixed amount) be awarded to the parents who filed taxes or the student?
What if the person was in a Surgical ICU unit for a month and didn't get the chance to vote?
What is the % voter turnout in Australian elections?As far as I know in Australia they fine you 50 bucks or something unless you have some valid excuse, no big deal. Also it is easier to enforce since I think they have far fewer homeless in Australia, so pretty much everyone can be tracked down. But like I said the penalty is no big deal.
What is the % voter turnout in Australian elections?
What are the "valid" excuses that are allowed under their law and who determines that?
How much does it cost their government to enforce their compulsory voting law, and how much money on average do they collect from citizens that break it?
Would be interesting to see all the numbers.
Similarly,
What if the voter only answers one ballot question of the 25 or so questions/votes of candidates on the list?
What if the voter bubbles all the ovals and votes for everything selecting all the choices available?
What if the voter answered "None of the Above" to every question?
What if the voter didn't answer any questions but there are pencil marks all over the ballot or art drawings which is not enough to signify voter intent?
Note: I don't know how the Australia ballot system is structured, so I'm using examples.
This is an example of a sample ballot in the US.
http://www.elections.state.md.us/elections/2010/general_proofing_ballots/baltimore county.pdf
Voter turn out would be like 95%+. Not many people fail to vote.
You can do whatever you want to the paper. There's no way to force people to fill it out correctly because voting is confidential so. If you don't vote it out exactly right it is not counted.
A lot of people do that, invalid votes were at about 5% this year.
I believe the fine increases every time you don't vote. I'm not sure but I think you can go to jail for not voting. It's probably never happened though.
We don't have primaries.
Another shining example of leftist elitism, folks!!!
The unwashed masses are too stupid to decide what is good for them!
Make the voting period 7 days which gives everyone a chance to get to the polls, then enact a voters tax credit which gives you $200 credit on federal income tax for proof of voting![]()
Does anyone else see the merit in this? Maybe then the candidates won't spend billions to get people to vote and instead try to develop and sell actual policies? Frankly I am appalled by the amount of campaign spending. And maybe it actually gives third parties a chance since now people disillusioned with both parties simply won't get their asses off the couch to vote.
But it's still on the record that they voted(even if their scratch marks are determined to be ineligible) and they won't be fined, correct?
As you can see from the sample ballot from my area, there were a LOT of people running uncontested. Why should I waste my time and energy filling in the bubble if you're running uncontested? I hope choosing not to answer a particular question(unless there really is only one question) doesn't make your entire ballot invalid.
I assume the "average" Australian voter is more educated on the issues than the "average" American is?
Most people here just pick a side and stick(you have the ultra left and the ultra right here with barely anything except a few cactus in the middle of the desert) to it instead of seeing things from both lenses and picking what makes sense.
I don't expect "compulsory" voting here to work in our favor since people are not educated on the issues or simply don't care enough to vote for the most part.
Not as big an idiot as the better-than-thou elitist leftists who keep telling everyone they are too stupid to know what's best for them.
The low information right wing voters came out in droves, the left wing ones didn't. That's what the election was about.
So what you're saying is that democrat voters are a bunch of stupid fucks who don't even know the name of the democratic candidates and just vote for whichever one has a D next to his or her name? Well that's just lovely. Voting for people you've never heard of is exactly what the founding fathers wanted.Making voters not know the party when they vote doesn't solve anything about the problems with parties - and benefits Republicans, since more people are Democrats.
This was the OP's point. If you don't know the name of the candidate, you should not be voting. End of story.Hiding the party from voters isn't even logical in that it'll leaver voters with no idea who they're voting for if they remain ignorant, and they'll know the party if they are informed.
You should not force someone to vote.
Now, removing the political party affiliation from being stated on the ballot might help.
wouldn't help. Nobody really knows what they're voting for as it is. It would be better to have voting on a day when people normally have off. or make it a national holiday.
and get rid of attack ads. make candidates run on issues and not just against the other guy.
take it a step farther and show just political history and stand on key issues.
Bad idea. Very bad idea.
The people who don't take the time to vote are the kind of people you don't want to vote.
Plus, if we forced people to vote the vote getting process would become one big give away. Candidates would fight over who can give away the most money and benefits to their voters. Would be a disaster for the country.
