Smart Hemp Gummies Au/Nz What Are The...
Food & Drink0 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Kathyan. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Good question Kathyan. I have seen elections with the option to vote for "Re-Opening Nominations" and I've even seen Vote RON campaigns during those elections.
Personally, I think democracy's a bit over-rated bearing in mind that we can't vote on the electoral system.
My local government has six unelected members because no-one else stood for election, and our national government was elected by about 9 million people, and yet governs a nation of nearly 7 times that.
I would hate to see mandatory voting. Instead, I'd like it to be mandatory for anyone seeking to "represent" a group of people to secure their agreement, instead of securing 21% of the group's agreement and then claiming to represent the whole lot.
In case you're wondering where 21% came from, that's the percentage of the population who voted for Labour at the last election.
Mandatory voting was one of the topics on Matthew Wright's show this morning (happened to have it on..). Im not sure if voting should be compulsory, but in a way I do take Matthew Wight's view that if this was the case, and a majority of the country voted 'none of the above' then although the party with the next highest votes would win, it might make the politicians realise that something has to be done.
I'm 20 and have never really taken much of an interest in politics at all - however now studying abit of economics on a business course I realise just how much politics affects my life. People don't vote because they don't really know enough about it - it is also not clear what each party stands for. Ideally the parties would come up with ways of making people want to vote for them, rather than it being compulsory.