gold_medal wrote on Jan 5
th, 2013 at 4:36pm:
the trap in voluntary voting is that it creates an opportunity for political parties to gather in the unwilling and uninterested to vote for them regardless of policy. it turns parties from providers of policy to providers of buss services to polls from districts that support them.
It could just as readily be argued that the trap in compulsory voting is that those who would have otherwise done the rest of us a favour by following their instict and not voting, can be lured into voting for (guess which party) by promises of benefits - benefits that drain the coffers of the state.
In other words, compulsory voting leads to the Anna Bligh syndrome.
If democracy includes dragging people to the poll who are only voting because they have to, then I don't care what they call it - it's over-rated.
Quote:'others do it' (primary school argment),
It's not a primary school argument. The position of the vast majority of western democracies is that of voluntary voting, and that is something that's eminently worthy of consideration.
Now if you're saying that considering the position of the majority is just a primary school argument, then by implication, you imply that the argument for democracy itself is a primary school argument.