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It would encourage uniformed or unserious voting :) -Apex-
U.S. citizens already have compulsory obligations to their country
It would be too difficult to implement.
It is not compulsory to vote in any election.In Australia, compulsory voting for federal elections was introduced in 1912.
There is no compulsory voting in Japan.
Compulsory enrollment was introduced in 1912, however compulsory voting didn't come in until 1924
No.
There is nowhere in the United States that it is compulsory to vote. Compulsory voting is most common in South America. Australia may be an exception; a democracy with compulsory participation in voting, and with enforcement. Several European countries and some of the Pacific island nations have compulsory voting, but often do not enforce it.
Compulsory voting should be implemented in the united states
Political parties don't need to work as hard to earn votes. Political parties don't need to motivate their base, only the swinging voters. This makes it harder for people to tell the difference between the right and the left. Compulsory voting distorts the true free will of the people by counting government-assisted votes and encouraging non-compliance. Compulsory voting leads to high levels of informal voting, where people avoid voting in objection to compulsory voting. Compulsory voting means innocent people are punished for doing nothing wrong and hurting nobody. Compulsory voting is almost non-existent in the world...just a handful of countries enforce it. And most of those countries can hardly even be called democratic. Compulsory voting leads to people avoiding registering to vote in order to protect their freedom. Compulsory voting means freedom is mandatory. It can't be. It's not true. Compulsory voting favours greater government regulation & control. Voting is how the people exert power over government not how the government exerts power over the people. Compulsory voting increases political apathy. After non-registration and informal votes are taken into account, compulsory voting has lower voter turnouts than many voluntary voting systems.
Opponents to compulsory voting believe that it will only increase the number of ignorant voters, as well as the number of "donkey" ballots. Casting a donkey is the act of casting an indiscriminate vote. This has been seen in countries such as Australia where voting is compulsory and an estimated 2% of the votes are donkey votes. Instead of informed votes, non beneficial random or blank votes are cast at the whim of the voter. Furthermore, to make voting mandatory would also require accommodations. At the moment, there are a myriad of reasons why voters do not vote. Among them are work schedule, voter registration, and availability of polls. Compulsory voting would require the government to have to create solutions such as allowing workers to take a paid leave in order to vote, create more polls, and modify the voter registration system. To fund these programs would cost would be of undetermined costs. Because of these reasons, opponents of compulsory voting believe that it would be more advantageous to culture informed, responsible citizens, instead of trying to force the uninformed. Voting is also considered a civil right to many. Just as one may not force an individual to exercise their right to free speech, one many not force them to vote, for it infringes upon their liberties.
The sentence "Compulsory voting promotes a more equitable and representative democracy" is an example of a claim of value from the article "Compulsory Voting An Idea Whose Time Has Come".