Thursday, July 26, 2007

More Crap

This is the other piece I submitted the the local paper. Unfortunately when I opened the file I realized that the spacing between paragraphs was all fucked up. That can be my excuse when I get denied because the "white man" excuse is a tad bit weak.

There is a huge problem with our elections, we are told, so rampant that it may destroy the whole process. What is this emergency? Voter fraud, yes, there is widespread voter fraud being committed, they say. Though when one actually looks at the numbers there doesn’t really seem to be much fraud at all. The real crisis, which these people ignore, is not that one guy, here, tried to vote twice or one woman, there, didn’t realize she was disenfranchised and tried to vote. The crisis with our democracy is that the people don’t vote.
The last time that over 60 percent of voters turned out to the polls in a Presidential Election was 1968. Of the nine Presidential elections held since then, 2004 had the highest turnout with a little over 55 percent voting. Contrast that with the latest elections, for heads of state, in France where nearly 74 percent went to the polls, Bolivia where 84 percent voted and Finland which had 74 percent show up to the polls.
It becomes worse in off year Congressional Elections. In our most recent Congressional Election, which switched control from one party to the other, just under 37 percent bothered voting. If we take a look around the world we find similar differences as we did before. We can look across the pond to Austria where 78 percent came out and if we gander southward to Peru we should be ashamed since they turned out 88 percent of their voters.
Ralph Nader sold tens of thousands of tickets, at 7 bucks a piece, in 2000, to people who wanted to hear his message. His main thesis, right or wrong, was that the Democrats and the Republicans have become too much alike and control all political debate.
Ross Perot’s message of how terribly irresponsible our national debt was, got airtime because people were looking for another voice. Before Ross Perot no one talked about our National Debt but now it is commonplace in political speak.
I offer up two suggestions that, though they won’t fix the problem, could help move us in a direction that brings out more voters to the polls. It is true that we may never reach the levels of countries like Peru but we should and could get at least 2/3 or 3/4 of the population to care enough about elections to vote in them.
We should allow more voices into the debates, Presidential and Congressional. There are two common arguments for why this should not be the case and both are very flimsy. The most common is that it is just too hard to have debates with a stage full of candidates even though we do it for the Presidential Primary debates and it seems to work.
The other argument is that anyone could become a Presidential candidate even if they couldn’t feasibly win and this would allow anyone and everyone to be in the debates. Right now there is a threshold of 15 percent in the polls that must be crossed to gain entry into the debates. What could be done is to make it so that if a candidate is on the ballot in enough states, in which it is theoretically possible to get enough Electoral College votes, to win, they get entry into the debates.
The one thing the countries listed above and their elections have in common with each other but differ with America is that they are all held on Sunday when a larger percentage of the general public is off from work. The reasoning behind the 1845 law making our elections fall on the second Tuesday in November is gone. America is no longer an agricultural society who can’t vote while the crops are in the field and need time to travel into the city.
We, as Americans, need to find ways to fix our elections and democracy. We have so many intelligent citizens in this country with a myriad of ideas. We need to stop fearing change and see that there is a crisis in American democracy. If this is the Democracy we are trying to sell to the world, I fear we won’t be finding too many takers.

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