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Could E-Voting Cure Voter Apathy? 646
Bendebecker notes that The Register
is saying that "A major trial is about to kick off in the UK that could help decide whether e-voting is merely a gimmick or whether it can genuinely help cure voter apathy." Voter Apathy or Flash Poll Elections? What is the lesser of 2 evils?
In a word, no! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:In a word, no! (Score:3, Interesting)
We truly need a revolution.
Re:In a word, no! (Score:2)
Re:In a word, no! (Score:2)
Voting for idiots or idiots voting? (Score:5, Insightful)
Have you ever been in a political discussion where you wonder how the other person can even begin to believe his or her arguments are sound? Remember what AOL joining the Internet did to newsgroups, etc?
Re:Voting for idiots or idiots voting? (Score:4, Insightful)
Have you ever been in a political discussion where you wonder how the other person can even begin to believe his or her arguments are sound? Remember what AOL joining the Internet did to newsgroups, etc?
True, but one must observe that the AOL users slowly but surely have become much more educated and dare I say better netizins since the merge.
I suspect that we may find the same thing with internet voting. If voters start voting online, I belive they will have a greater tendancy to find information online.
Voters are already voting on soundbites. Any exposure to more communicative media should be encouraged.
Re:Voting for idiots or idiots voting? (Score:4, Insightful)
If voters start voting online, I believe they will have a greater tendency to have their systems hijacked by "voteware" - the electoral equivalent to spyware - and won't have a frickin' clue who they voted for, or why.
Imagine downloading a EULA that says "By installing this software, you agree to install VoteGator on your system! VoteGator keeps you informed of $PARTY's hot new offers! Use VoteGator for all your voting needs!"
(And just think of the "fun" an enemy agent could have with a .VBS worm :)
Call me a Luddite, but I think I'll pass on e-voting.
Re:Voting for idiots or idiots voting? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:In a word, no! (Score:2, Redundant)
online voting would indeed get this non-voter to the polls.
save all the 'you should vote' comments. i'm too lazy to even read them.
You *SHOULDN'T* vote. (Score:4, Interesting)
This is precisely one of the problems with online voting. If you're not willing to exert the effort to go to a polling place, you shouldn't be voting anyway.
Another problem with online voting is the digital divide. A new study found that 42% of Americans aren't online [pewinternet.org]. That's doesn't necessarily correspond to 42% of registered voters, but a number that large shows that online voting won't benefit a significant number of people.
Probably the single best way to improve voter participation is to move elections to Sunday. Almost everyone in the country either has Sunday off or they don't have to work normal polling hours on Sunday (7 AM to 7 PM). Many countries around the world have elections on Sundays, I can't believe we still use Tuesdays.
In many cases (Score:4, Interesting)
I think this would have an age-gap stopper though, since you're mostly going to see the younger people getting into the "e-voting is cool" phase (and many older generation can't even use a PC), at least at first.
What we really need though, is a system to be able to vote on issues that are important to us. If we combined a system that took the parliamentary vote, along with combined citizen votes (net-votes, etc) - at least we'd have more say in things.
Re:In a word, no! (Score:5, Interesting)
That is why we need a "None of the above" choice on the ballot too. California tried this via referendum, but it didn't go through.
Re:In a word, no! (Score:3, Interesting)
All I want is to be ruled by my peers. The none of the above clause will just cause the politcos to be worse not better. We need to remove the career politician.
My way if you're eligable to vote your name is entered in a lottery if you win you get the job.
If you choose not to server your passport is revoked for your term, in effect you become a non-citizen, unable to travel etc.
For congress/senate there is a 25% turnover each year.
This system would elect a
Re:In a word, no! (Score:4, Insightful)
IMHO, politics in the USA is focused way too much at the federal level. If the local newspapers, TV news and such would cover LOCAL politics more, and local politicians had far more influence over our lives, the average citizen would feel their vote counted a whole lot more. As it is now, you constantly here how the feds are doling out money for this and that, and local & state governments line up to get their hand out. I don't think the framers of our nation intended for the Fed to be anywhere near as powerful as it is.
I'll stop rambling now.
- Jasen.
Re:In a word, no! (Score:3, Insightful)
IMHO, politics in the USA is focused way too much at the federal level.
Absolutely. The U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights were written to retain personal and states rights and to limit the power of the federal government. Since the signing, it's been a continual power grab by the federal government. It is not what the founders intended.
CowboyNeal! and "Nobody For President" (Score:3, Informative)
I always liked Wavy Gravy [wavygravy.net]'s "Nobody for President! [nobodyforpresident.org]" campaign.
DAMN STRAIGHT! (Score:3, Interesting)
You need to do one other thing, as well, IMHO: You need to recognize that the "primaries" are nothing of the sort - they are a wart on the side of the electoral process, completely outside the scope of the laws defining the system. They are purely a function of the political parties.
The best thing in the world would be to de-emphasise them, by:
1) not allowing the parties access to the voter rolls as maintained by the Sta
Re:In a word, no! (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, a new election requires new campaigning time. So if elections are held 9 months before the end of the term, each election has a little less than three months for campaigning.
The trouble of course, is that if candidates are elected right away
Re:In a word, no! (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, capping them at three sounds like a really bad idea. That sounds exploitable - for example, fielding horribly objectionable candidates the first two rounds and then putting out a slightly-less-objectionable but still horrible one (eg, Bush or Gore) for the last, when the people can't reject them. This is the problem with this sort of cyclic voting.
The anti-voting proposed in another post sounds good (instead of voting for candidates, you vote against them). Ranking systems also seem to work well
Re:In a word, no! (Score:2)
Re:In a word, no! (Score:3, Insightful)
The cause of voter apathy is the centralization of power away from town councils and county seats to Washington DC.
Debating the city councilman who is also ones neighbor and with whom one knows they may have an impact on issues that affect ones day to day life is meaningful and engaging.
The ultimate in voter impotence is complete and total micromanagment of
Re:In a word, no! (Score:2)
1) one politician is ahead far enough in the polls such that the election is pretty well decided 2) both politicians are acceptable and they don't favor one above the other 3) they are simply lazy and don't follow current events enough to care
I unfortunately think (3) is all too common. It is partially why turnout for Presidential elections in the US is so much higher than for local elections. However to be honest I think the other two are true as wel
Re:In a word, no! (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, this is not entirely true. Take me for example. I didn't vote in 2000, but would probably have voted for Gore. Would this have made a difference? No. Because Gore already won my state (Washington) and already got the electoral votes for it.
My voting for Gore would not have gotten him any closer to winning the election. Neither would another 1000 people in my state voting for Gore have made a difference. It just would have me
Apathy is a self-imposed weighting scheme (Score:5, Insightful)
I think apathy actually works as a weighting mechanism in our current form of voting. People who care little about politics get a smaller vote because they didn't take the opportunity they were given. People who care greatly about politics, or at least a specific issue, are willing to wait in lines and do whatever is necessary. They tend to get weighted a bit more heavily in our society. I don't think that's necessarily a bad thing. The public gets to decide on the weighting based on their own actions. If the government were selecting a weighting, then we'd really have a problem. But I don't see exactly why we need to go to great lengths to solve the voter apathy "problem".
GMD
Reasons People Didn't Vote (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Right on! (Score:3, Interesting)
You lose none of what you "gain" by abstaining, but you can help out parties that actually reflect your views.
Hell, if enough people do that a few might even get elected. Wouldn't that piss off just the right people
-Peter
Can't wait until the elections get h4xx0r3d (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course there are ways to ensure this dosen't happen.. but nothing's impossible.
Re:Can't wait until the elections get h4xx0r3d (Score:2)
or maybe...
DOS the Vote!!!
take your pick...
About Time! (Score:2)
Re:About Time! (Score:2)
Re:About Time! (Score:4, Insightful)
Sure you can, as long as the system dissassociates who you are with who you voted for, basically authenticate you a valid voter, and only allow you one vote, but stick your vote in a pile in the DB instead of associating with the person who voted, so they can keep track of who voted, but not who they voted for, and still have a set of results.
lesser of 3 evils, you mean (Score:3, Funny)
Voter Apathy (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Voter Apathy (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Voter Apathy (Score:3, Insightful)
Here in Maryland, during the last gubernatorial election, the Libertarian party needed 2% of the vote to be recognized as an official party and get campaign funding. Alas, they didn't get 2%, so as a result, we have fewer options. But think about this exciting thought! Voter turnout was about 55%. So suppose that that 45% went out and voted for a random 3rd party. Th
Re:Voter Apathy (Score:2)
You're sounding like
web campaigns only (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course the only way to make this happen in the US would be with a constitutional amendment. But if we were able to ban and then
Free brownies (Score:3, Funny)
Yes. (Score:2, Funny)
-Peter
No, but... (Score:2)
By the looks of things... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:By the looks of things... (Score:2)
(My company blocks the Onion because of the naughty words, so I can't link to the exact story, sorry...)
Re:By the looks of things... (Score:2)
It's a gimmick (Score:3, Insightful)
The cure is more democracy. Abolish the electoral college. Make elections publicly funded, and ban private funding. Implement proportional representation to break the "two-party" system.
. . . and as long as I'm in fantasyland, let's build a time-travel device, and create a perpetual motion machine.
Re:It's a gimmick (Score:3, Insightful)
Smaller Electorial College (Score:3, Insightful)
Afaik the members of the EC don't do anything other than cast their presidential votes, which are _suppposed_ to be representative, so just cut out the actual people and do the voting on a county level.
The electoral college is a good thing. (Score:2)
I believe that the electoral college is a good thing. One of the things that the founding fathers worried about was tyranny of the majority. That a few big states would run roughshod over the small states. Hence, the division of powers between the House and the Senate, and devices such as the Electoral College.
Without the Electoral College, the candidates would focus exclusively on the major urban centers where all the votes are. The rural area
Re:It's a gimmick (Score:3, Insightful)
One step towards this, in the US, would be to change how income taxes are paid. Have the states collect it, and then forward a reasonab
No way (Score:5, Insightful)
Schneier makes an attempt at this but it's pretty convoluted, I'm not even sure I understand it all and I at least know a little about this kind of stuff.
We may have to consider publishing who a person votes for. I know it goes against the grain of a longstanding tradition, but to make the protocol simple enough for the average person to understand while keeping it free of fraud may require nothing less.
Re:No way (Score:3, Insightful)
Doing away with the anonymous ballot would allow people to feel pressured to cast a 'popular' vote on unpopular issues rather than their true feeling, as well. I'm all for the legalization of marijuana, but I
Unconstitutional in many states (Score:5, Insightful)
The reason for this restriction, as others have stated, is to prevent election fraud. If you can't prove how you voted, there's no point in buying votes or attempting to coerce voters.
The other manifestation of the same restriction is that you must vote in private. Nobody can join you in the voting booth, etc. After all, external proof of how you voted is irrelevant if some 300 lb guy with a lead pipe is in the booth with you.
Ironically, this is provided by voting in public. Since others are around, nobody can force themselves into your voting booth.
But e-voting systems fail miserably at this. If I can vote from the convenience of my home:
- a battered woman can be forced to vote "the right way" by her abusive husband. (or use "spouse" all around, since there are some battered husbands)
- an employee can be forced to vote in his boss's office.
- a church group can get together to pray and then "Witness" each other voting the right way.
and so forth. All highly illegal, but difficult to prove and expensive to buck since you're still beaten up, fired, excommunicated, whatever.
Would actual candidates (Score:2)
Would a belief that the candidates are not chosen (through funding) by corporations and lobbies perhaps increase voting?
Would a non-binding "none of the above" give people a way to come out and make a statement, rather than stay home and not vote at all?
Would a "check off all acceptable candidates" (not 1-4, just yeah/nay) make a difference and broaden the number of parties from the republicrat monopoly
E voting (Score:2)
1) This would be the biggest shiniest target for hackers around the world. What a convienent way to subvert the American democracy... From your desk in China! And much cheaper than giving huge donations to the democratic party!
2) This would be the biggest target for hackers in the US. All those crazy Libertarian high-tech industry workers would finally get a Libertarian president. Who cares if the exit polls dont even re
Cowboyneal (Score:2, Funny)
E-elections would be great (but they aren't) (Score:2, Insightful)
skewed samples (Score:2, Insightful)
Online voting will allow the lazy of ass to participate, and thus skew the results more towards the technologically aware individuals. Again, the politicians will be aware of this, and would start taking technological issues more seriously, to
Re:skewed samples (Score:2)
Re:skewed samples (Score:2)
Really? (Score:3, Insightful)
If voting were simpler, those people disillusioned with the two bipartisan condidates might be more willing to cast their vote for a third-party candidate.
Also, eVoting would perhaps lessen the value of the poor voter. While lazy upper/middle-class voters with home computers and Internet connections could easily vote, those without them are still unlikely to vote.
Should help (Score:4, Insightful)
Voter participation should likewise increase through the use of varied voting methods, including one that can be easily done from home.
Voter apathy is not a problem. (Score:5, Insightful)
(2) If people are apathetic because they do not like any of the choices available then making it easier to vote will have no effect (let's see - would you like to eat broken glass or dog-food? Would delivery to your door-step make the choice easier?).
(3) If people are apathetic because they would be equally happy with either party then again making it easier to vote will not make a difference.
/. Apathy (Score:2)
How many people do you know.... (Score:2)
This way they could just take 5 minutes, log on, vote, log out, and be done with it.
Not that this will solve the real problems with politics.
When will people realize that the most effective Congressman is the one who passes no more laws than absolutely necessary?
Its like the effective System Administrator. If he does his job
Might well help (Score:2)
I would be concerned if it lead to some people treating the election as they would a slashdot poll, selecting whatever took their fancy instead of a considered decision as to who want to [not] represent your opinion [that means fuck all to them].
I would like to see online voting used for referendums for things that would otherw
Why cure it? (Score:3, Insightful)
A Republic, never a Democracy (Score:3, Interesting)
Although long forgotten, our Constitution is the law of the land in only one way: it restricts government from infringing on the rights of the sovereign people and the States. This means we are NOT a democracy. As the famous quote goes, a democracy is like two wolves and a sheep voting on what to have for lunch.
E-Voting is a great idea, but it has immense limitations. Our Republic was designed to protect the minority (as small as one person) from a crazy majority. It is only because we have forgotten about the Republic that such unconstitutional programs such as Social Security, Federal Education subsidies and control, and the Welfare State have come into existance (wholly socialist schemes that truly have no place in a free culture). I capitalized them because they should really be trademarked
I like the idea of E-Voting so long as the Supreme Court actually does the job intended, to protect the rights of the people by making sure ALL laws abide by the Constitutional restraints on government. Unfortunately, the Supreme Court is handled by Socialists and Fascists, not Constitutionalists, so we would be at great risk of losing the country to both the Socialist left and the Fascist right, both of which feed each other's desires by giving in to bad schemes.
Re:A Republic, never a Democracy (Score:4, Informative)
I swear, if I hear one more person say that "The US isn't a democracy, it's a republic," I'm going to kill somebody.
First off, what you're trying to drive at isn't "the US is a republic" so much as "the US is a federal republic." The "federal" part is how state's rights come into the equation, and also explains how democracy is used in our country (in a decentrallized manner).
Secondly, I'd personally say the US is more democratic than the UK. The election of the US president is far more accessible to the public than the election of the UK's prime minister, members of the upper house of the US legislature are chosen democratically while members of the House of Lords are born into the role, and there's still that monarchy bit.
"This means we are NOT a democracy."
How is it members of the House of Representatives are chosen again? Or the Senate, as of 1913? Hm? And that doesn't even begin to get into questions about our state and local governments. The only way we're not a democracy is if you compare us to a "true" democracy, where there is no legislature and the people vote on laws directly (offering Socrates a drink on the house).
You get the "we're a republic" from the bit of the federal constitution that says the states will have a "republican form of government." But don't forget that those governments have been formed democratically since before there even was a United States (let alone a federal constitution).
"Our Republic was designed to protect the minority (as small as one person) from a crazy majority"
RepublicS. And you're mincing words. The federal constitution was written in such a way to detatch the federal government from the passions of the mob (paraphrasing) while maintaining a decentralized power base (ie. federal). Note that there is no mention of the individual in the original document. The federal constitution has little to say about the role of the individual because that's what state constitutions are for.
"It is only because we have forgotten about the Republic that such unconstitutional programs such as Social Security, Federal Education subsidies and control, and the Welfare State have come into existance (wholly socialist schemes that truly have no place in a free culture)"
At worst they violate the Tenth Amendment, and vaguely at that. The only thing really restricting the way Congress spends its money is the Twenty-Seventh Amendment, which says they can't give themselves pay raises.
"so long as the Supreme Court actually does the job intended, to protect the rights of the people by making sure ALL laws abide by the Constitutional restraints on government."
Where exactly in the federal constitution does it mention the concept of judicial review? Hint: It doesn't. In many ways it's a power the court gave itself in the early Nineteenth Century.
"Unfortunately, the Supreme Court is handled by Socialists and Fascists, not onstitutionalists"
Then complain your democratically elected members of Congress. The ones that the federal constitution grants the power to impeach any and all federal judges. Oh, wait, that's right, you don't believe there's democracy in this country...
"so we would be at great risk of losing the country to both the Socialist left and the Fascist right, both of which feed each other's desires by giving in to bad schemes."
Get off your damned soap box before you embarass yourself any further. You're giving us true political crackpots a bad name.
Re:Sheesh (Score:3, Interesting)
You wouldnt have long distance jobs, it would simply cost too much. Think abou the implications of having to pay per usage, at market bearing prices to thing
Im torn. (Score:2)
Two Web Sites (there are many others) (Score:2)
Notable Software [notablesoftware.com]
Black Box Voting [blackboxvoting.com]
Then feel free to start talking about the merits of a rush to e-voting...
What does voter apathy mean to you? (Score:3, Interesting)
Many of the people who vote now do so without taking the time to understand the issues and the candidates' stands on the issues. Decreasing the barriers to voting will only increase the amount of stupid voting. I would rather have fewer voters who take more time to study the likely effects of their votes.
I encourage everyone to exhibit that kind of apathy. If you don't know what's going on, don't vote. I've done this selectively. If I am voting and have no real clue why one choice might be better than the other, I skip it and move on. Otoh, if you do want to vote, take the time to understand what's happening, look at the candidates and determine why they pick their positions.
Support democracy; vote with intelligence.
How to cure voter apathy (Score:4, Insightful)
Hell No! (Score:2, Insightful)
I'll tell you what.... (Score:2)
Increase of voting misuse (Score:4, Insightful)
You will have a lot of representatives from the DNC visiting nursing homes to help people that don't get to the polls to vote for the "right" candidate.
Not that this doesn't happen with absentee voting already, but the abuse will increase, and the weak minded will have loads of help in casting their votes.
I'm confused (Score:2)
I would be more enclined to understand an allow the confiscation of my money if i were eligible to partake in the fruits of my labor - but the simple
"Accidental" Candidates... (Score:4, Insightful)
If you get your ass up, get dressed, go down the street and stand in line so you can present ID to vote, you probably have at least some idea who you're going to vote for.
If you can do it naked, from your bed while eating Doritos, you may not have the same commitment.
Not Ready for Prime Time (Score:4, Interesting)
I seem to get some sort of security bulletin at least once a week. They're not all Windows vulnerabilities, either. I don't think we know how to do computer security well enough just yet to entrust our democracy to it. The voter identity systems and the tabulators must both be absolutely hack-proof.
How do we handle failures? Do I lose my right to vote if there's a cable cut somewhere between me and the Board of Elections? Do I lose my right to vote if my ISP has screwed up some routing table? Can a DoS attack deny my right to vote?
Because computers cost money, online voting makes it easier for those with enough money to have a computer to vote, and thus marginally disenfranchises those who don't.
Still, I'm all in favor of testing. Only when we've seen how this stuff works--and how it fails--will we start to understand what it's going to take to do this right. It's important to get it right.
Voting apathy is indeed a serious issue. (Score:3, Interesting)
This, of course, greatly empowers the people who do vote, since their votes count proportionally higher. Does this go against the "everybody gets one vote" principle? Perhaps. Worse yet, a number of people seem content treating elections - even presidential - as a game. A number of my friends voted for Nader during the last election, knowing full well that he wasn't going to get even 5% (he got something like 3%, as far as I recall), and not even necessarily supporting his program. Their justifications was that, "Well, I don't like either Bush or Gore, so I'm going to vote Green." If even a fraction of those who threw their vote away for Nader voted for Al Gore, we wouldn't be in the mess we are today.
Just ramblings, of course, and now I've gone completely off-topic. Ah well
Oregon, a Unique Experiment of Its Own (Score:5, Informative)
Mark, put in envelope, put in mail. Very easy. We still have low voter turnout. Even when the issue is beyond the normal election - e.g., "vote yes to raise your income taxes, vote no to not raise them" - we still don't see much participation.
I doubt whether voting on-line would change anything. It's marginally more convenient (no need to physically put the letter in the mailbox) but...
Voter apathy (Score:3, Interesting)
Go ahead and mod me as flamebait, but...
I never understanded why people feel a need to cure a problem that really isn't a problem. Who cares about people who think it is too much hassle to vote? Or think their vote doesn't make a difference? Or who just doesn't care? Leave voting to those who try to remain informed, and who actually feel a civic duty to do so.
Linus Torvalds elected President in 2010 (Score:5, Funny)
harder is better (Score:3, Interesting)
The idea of making voting easier seems counterproductive when the goal is for the best candidate verses who has the best smile or sense of humor. I could see airheads saying "I need to vote for someone... I know- I will vote for Bill Gates for president because I have heard his name before." In the United States, at one time, one needed to pass a litteracy exam and own property. I would love there to be a simple exam to pass before becoming a registered voter (something like who was the first president of the USA, how many states are in the USA and etc...). Now I know this is being done in England but I hope it never comes to the U.S.- especially if it is successful.
Lesser of two evils==Duverger's Law (Score:5, Insightful)
Rob Lanphier
p.s. Visit Electorama! [electorama.com] for more on this subject
Why the hell would I want to cure voter apathy? (Score:4, Funny)
Electronic voting is illegal here (Score:5, Insightful)
"What's good enough for Granddad, is good enough for me. The way it was, that's the way it's got to be."
An awful lot of "squelch the masses" replies... (Score:5, Insightful)
But that is what democracy is all about! It's not about "power to the rich" or "power to the intellectuals"...which often wind up being synonymous.
If you stand against online voting because it would "dilute the vote", then you're essentially arguing the same position that the South argued before the American Civil War, that "all people should count for tax purposes, but they don't get a vote". You can argue against it for many other reasons (lack of security, infrastructure, etc)...but *please* don't pick that one.
Re:An awful lot of "squelch the masses" replies... (Score:5, Interesting)
Of course, I'm also against the concept because it introduces unnecesary complecations into the voting process where problems can occur (why do you need Twenty-First Century technology to do something that Nineteenth Century technology can do just as well with less room for error?), but that's another subject.
I can't believe these reponses! (Score:3, Insightful)
In college, we successfully used an online voting system where the GREAT majority of votes were taken online. Not only had the percentage of votes been much higher than in years without online voting, but there was plenty of supplemental material to educate yourself on the votes beforehand.
It seems like many of you are worried about stupid people making stupid votes - I disagree. I still think that the lazy voter who doesn't care won't even bother to do an online vote. I think that many people who either can't make it, are too busy, or just intimidated by the process of our current voting scheme are perfect candidates.
So few in the US vote, it's rather sickening. I'm inclined to believe that if the percentage of eligible voters raised to even 60%, we would most likely never see a conservative in office again.
uh oh (Score:3, Funny)
Cowboy Neal!
Will it cure apathy???? (Score:3, Funny)
Eh...who cares.
Exit Polling? (Score:3, Insightful)
If you vote from home, then there's no exit polling. How is Peter Jennings going to tell California, Alaska, and Hawaii how to vote if he doesn't have the numbers from Maine, Florida, and New York in time??
Spam (Score:3, Funny)
Suggestion: allow saying NO. (Score:5, Interesting)
From anecdotal evidence there seems to be a significant number of eligible voters who can't bring themselves to say "yes" to any candidate. They don't feel like taking the trouble to go to a voting booth to say "yes" to the least disliked candidate, or going there and making a spoilt vote as a sign of their displeasure.
I suggest that if voters could place a negative vote there would be less apathy.
For example a "No" vote would subtract the total vote tally = -1 . "Don't care" = 0. "Yes" = +1. A net-unpopular candidate will have a negative score. If all candidates are in the negative, then maybe the least negative scored candidate should still win, but have a much shorter term (and not be able to credibly brag about having support of the majority
Would you feel like voting then?
You also get better information. A controversial candidate will have lots of Yes and No votes. You'd be able to have a clearer view of voter disatisfaction.
But I'm sure politicians don't want this sort of thing, and so this is unlikely to happen.
Oh well.
Apathy Due to the System Reinforcing Mediocrity (Score:4, Informative)
If I expect that I won't affect the outcome, I become apathetic, and don't bother to vote.
I could vote for a real candidate, more interesting than the two parties, but they won't get elected because only the two parties get elected and anything else is throwing my vote away. Why bother?
Solution: Change the voting system to one that is fair for any number of candidates instead of the current one that reinforces duopoly.
Acceptance Voting or Rated Voting should be implemented as soon as possible at all levels.
See the URL in my sig
http://bolson.org/voting/
(yes, this is my little holy cause)
The House of Reps, and the Electoral College (Score:4, Interesting)
Now, the number of Reps has not changes since 1913, when they filled the room in the Capitol - No you really want to run a country based upon the size of a room?
In 1776 the ratio was 1 Rep per 30k people - that means we would have 9033 Reps! I think this is a GOOD idea - It would be VERY hard for a company to BUY 4517 Reps, but your $100 bucks would start to be REAL money.
In 2002, the House and Senate raised $604 Million in Campaign contributions, or $1.29 Million Per candidate (435 Reps, 33 Senate (Senate count an estimate - 1/3))
Now, let's say we have 9033 Reps and 33 Senators up for election -for a total of 9066. Now if they only get the same amount of contributions, they average 66k each, so lets say they get more - $100k. Your $100 bucks speaks a LOT louder, and it starts to become possible for an individual to run their own campaign, particulary when you realize the big money goes to the 33 Senators - in fact, the average Incumbent Rep spent 500K and the Challenger about 100k - if you figure 1/20th, we talking 25K for an incumbent, and 5K for a challenger. That $100 starts to look like REAL cash
Black Box Voting Scandal (Score:3, Interesting)
With the rise of computerized voting systems, there follows a greater opportunity to cheat in elections. In the past election [for congress], voting districts started using computer voting systems. The problem with this is the lack of accountability. The voting machines are not open source [which in itself is not a problem]. However in the last election, there were a couple incidents in which the vendors "upgraded" [or modified] the code after it was inspected by the accounting people.
In addition, in the last election, one of the candidate owned great number of shares in the voting machine production companies of his state. This is a great potential for conflict of interest.
Lastly, hackers found that the binary files and certain voting data files were found on the company's public FTP site. It was improperly configured so that you can upload your own data files to overwrite the official ones.
Anyways, until we get a more secured system that is more accountable, we should not jump into computerized voting.
Read more about this at: Salon.com Hacking Democracy [salon.com]
Online voting won't change voter apathy (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It wont help my non Voting (Score:2)
Re:Too easy! (Score:2)