I'm posting this here rather than in the U.S. election forum because it's not limited to the U.S. In fact, it might apply even more to other countries.
In an election year, you can't so much as turn on a television without seeing a "public service" announcement telling people to get out and vote. They're everywhere.
People seem to take it as a given that encouraging people to vote is a good thing, but let me wax skeptical for a moment and ask whether it really is. If people aren't motivated enough to vote without all this pushing, can they possibly be motivated enough to do the research so they can vote responsibly?
Does it do any good to get people to vote if they're going to do it half-assed? Are 100 million lazy voters better than 10 million motivated ones? My gut feeling is no. I think I would prefer a smaller number of more involved voters. Some people call that elitist, saying that I'm espousing a "class system" in which the majority have no representation. However, I don't see a problem with this -- as long as the opportunity to vote remains open to everyone, this "ruling class" is entirely self-selected. The only real concern I can see is that motivated extremists might have a disproportionate impact on the outcome, but I don't know if that objection is fatal -- it's not like the general population makes terrific voting choices, either.
Still, I don't want to jump to conclusions. Is there any evidence out there that shows what effect encouraging voting has? I'm also interested what the effects have been in countries like Australia where voting is compulsory. I really don't know how you'd quantify something like this, but maybe someone has a good idea.
What are your impressions of encouraging/requiring voting? Is it good or bad?
Jeremy
In an election year, you can't so much as turn on a television without seeing a "public service" announcement telling people to get out and vote. They're everywhere.
People seem to take it as a given that encouraging people to vote is a good thing, but let me wax skeptical for a moment and ask whether it really is. If people aren't motivated enough to vote without all this pushing, can they possibly be motivated enough to do the research so they can vote responsibly?
Does it do any good to get people to vote if they're going to do it half-assed? Are 100 million lazy voters better than 10 million motivated ones? My gut feeling is no. I think I would prefer a smaller number of more involved voters. Some people call that elitist, saying that I'm espousing a "class system" in which the majority have no representation. However, I don't see a problem with this -- as long as the opportunity to vote remains open to everyone, this "ruling class" is entirely self-selected. The only real concern I can see is that motivated extremists might have a disproportionate impact on the outcome, but I don't know if that objection is fatal -- it's not like the general population makes terrific voting choices, either.
Still, I don't want to jump to conclusions. Is there any evidence out there that shows what effect encouraging voting has? I'm also interested what the effects have been in countries like Australia where voting is compulsory. I really don't know how you'd quantify something like this, but maybe someone has a good idea.
What are your impressions of encouraging/requiring voting? Is it good or bad?
Jeremy