I never said that you couldn't abstain. And I'm saying "I" because you're responding to me, not angrysoba.
Whoops! I guess I got my quote tags crossed. Sorry 'bout that.
And I'm sorry for any other confusion I may have caused. What I meant by "abstain" was, "decline to travel to a polling place and register a vote (null or otherwise)". Which, in Australia, is illegal.
So, returning to my original question to you (not angrysoba) -- What is undemocratic about deciding to stay home on election day?
But how do you know that? How do you know that say, 60% of that 80% decided not to vote because they believe that their vote won't achieve anything?
Why should I care what people believe or why the decide voting isn't worth their time and effort? What's important to me is that--whatever their reason--they have the freedom to decide for themselves what level of participation matters to them.
Besides, if 60% of people don't think their vote matters, the solution isn't to force them to go and vote anyway. And if they're
right, then I'd say your democracy has far worse problems than requiring people who know better to waste their time participating in a pointless ritual.
And if 20% of people only bother to cast a vote why is it that the position in question is not left vacant since most people have decided that either no candidate is worthy of the position?
Or most people have decided that either candidate is worthy of the position?
Or most people have decided that the position isn't important enough to be worthy of their attention?
Or that the 20% of their fellow citizens who actually care about such things seem to be muddling along just fine without them, and they have better things to do that day?
But okay, sure: Let's set it up such that if an election doesn't attract at least a quorum of voters, then the position remains unfilled. But show me a position that can go unfilled, and I'll show you a position that didn't need to be created in the first place. Instead of agonizing about whether or not to force people to come out and vote for a position they don't really need, why not eliminate the pointless position
and the pointless election that comes with it?
And how do you know that it's not an indicator that people aren't happy with the system?
How do you know it
is an indicator that people aren't happy with the system? And again, why should I care what their reasons are? They're free citizens in a free country. Any time their unhappiness with the system rises to the level of actually mattering to them, they're free to go and vote themselves a better system.
Here's an idea: Instead of passing a law requiring people to vote whether they want to or not, how about working to give them meaningful elections and convince them that voting is worth their time? And if you can't succeed at that (or working at it isn't worth
your time), then why not let them decide for themselves what to care about?
So you believe in stronger local governments over state or federal ones?
In general, yes. In the US the power of the federal government over the lives of individuals is inversely proportional to the influence individuals have over the federal government. This strikes me as a perverse and toxic state of affairs.
For one thing, it seems to result in a sort of sick fetishization of national elections, and distracts from the local politics that should actually matter more, and that indviduals can actually influence directly (not to mention that even in national elections, voters will have more influence by getting involved with their local party, instead than self-aggrandizingly marching into a booth on election day and pulling a lever for "the president of the United States").
Isn't your conclusion sort of relying on the premise that if you are required to vote that you are required to fill in the ballot?
No, it's not. I hope that I've already cleared up the misunderstanding about what I meant by "abstain".
My argument is relying on the premises that a free citizen choosing to stay home on election day produces just as democratic a result as the citizen who casts a vote; and that making them go to the polling place doesn't actually solve any of the problems that have been suggested so far.
I'm saying, let's not make a fetish of People Voting For Things, and here it seems Australia has gone ahead and made it their state religion.