Foundation Briefs Advanced Level Sept/Oct 2013 Brief



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174826514-Foundation-Briefs-compulsory-voting
democratic ones.
Ceilings are difficult A ceiling on political activity exists in relation to the vote -- one person, one vote. But
ceilings on money have run up against court interpretations of the First Amendment, and any limitation
on other activities -- on writing letters, protesting, attendance at meetings -- would certainly do sob (b



Sept/Oct 2013

Neg: Decrease Quality of System

foundationbriefs.com

Page 64 of 104
Under a democracy, the responsibility of voting is different from the requirement to vote,
DAT
Moraro, Piero. Why Compulsory Voting Undermines Democracy Living Ethics, 88. St.
James Ethics Centre. Winter 2012.
The main argument in defence of compulsory voting is the importance of raising citizens participation in elections. Australia’s turnout rate has never fallen below 90% since 1924, in striking comparison with most Western countries that struggle to reach 60%. These are nevertheless, merely quantitative considerations the fact that more people go to vote is not abetter thing for democracy. In fact, it could be argued that compulsory voting is likely to do more damage than good, by reducing the quality of the electoral outcome. Forcing everyone to vote means that the voice of those with no interest in politics will influence the decision about who rules the country. This generates what author Jason Brennan calls pollution of the polls in his book
The Ethics of Voting and is one of the main causes of the actual crisis of democracy worldwide incompetent politicians winning elections through media control (the recent case of Italy under Silvio Berlusconi epitomises this phenomenon. By the same token, compulsory voting cannot be defended by arguing that a government’s legitimacy of a majority formed by a low turnout is questionable, for numbers alone do not add credibility in this regard. Favouring democracy to other forms of government cannot be because of the mere fact that democracy allows everyone’s voice in the public arena. This might be, if anything, a reason against democracy. Dragging people
to the polls will do nothing to improve the quality of our democratic lives, insofar as people do not take

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