Foundation Briefs Advanced Level Sept/Oct 2013 Brief



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174826514-Foundation-Briefs-compulsory-voting
Sept/Oct 2013

Neg: Voting vs. Turnout

foundationbriefs.com

Page 66 of 104
Compulsory Voting vs. Compulsory Turnout
Lever, Annabelle. "Liberalism, Democracy and the Ethics of Voting" London School of
Economics
Proponents of compulsory voting generally believe that people are morally obliged to vote unless they have conscientious objections to voting. No one thinks that there is amoral duty simply to turnout and tick your name off a list at election time unless people have a duty to vote. So, such justification as there is for compulsory turnout is parasitic on the justification of compulsory voting. It is therefore wrong to suppose that it is easier to justify compulsory turnout than compulsory voting. How compulsory voting is supposed to fix the problems of low and unequal turnout at elections is reasonably clear. (Lijphart, 1997; Lever a) By contrast, it is unclear how compulsory turnout is going to solve these problems. Consequently, it is harder, not easier, to justify compulsory turnout than compulsory voting once we have allowed that people with conscientious objections to voting should be exempt from moral and legal duties to vote. (Pg. 2)
This card could prove very valuable to the Negative in instances where the Affirmative attempts to claim
both the benefits of compulsory voting as well as avoid the costs of compulsory voting, namely forcing
people to actually vote. The point here is that if you are only requiring people to turnout then the benefits
such as decreased inequality are not guaranteed. To obtain those benefits, the disenfranchised must
actually vote however, doing so comes with its own set of costs (see Neg evidence from previous sections)

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