The optimist in me hopes this will hurt one nation and be the start of their popularity decreasing. But the pessimist sees this as one more step towards replicating the hell hole that America has become.
I think the difference between America and Australia is the mandatory voting. I’m hoping the general majority won’t let shit like this fly. Where I’m guessing in America the empassioned fringe voters probably pull more weight than the disillusioned who won’t vote.
You’d think compulsory voting in and of itself would be a smarter early policy to aim for if you want a US political shit show. Then you make elections a workday. Then you make it so you fall off he roll every year or so. Finally you make it difficult to get onto the roll itself.
Even in the USA, if you divide the population into categories, the ‘did not vote’ cohort would win every election.
We are not anywhere near as religious a nation as the USA. Abortion just isn’t really a topic here, because the 10% who’d be against it wouldn’t stand a chance of passing such a change. I think getting rid of compulsory voting would be a more popular policy to start with.
The optimist in me hopes this will hurt one nation and be the start of their popularity decreasing. But the pessimist sees this as one more step towards replicating the hell hole that America has become.
I think the difference between America and Australia is the mandatory voting. I’m hoping the general majority won’t let shit like this fly. Where I’m guessing in America the empassioned fringe voters probably pull more weight than the disillusioned who won’t vote.
You’d think compulsory voting in and of itself would be a smarter early policy to aim for if you want a US political shit show. Then you make elections a workday. Then you make it so you fall off he roll every year or so. Finally you make it difficult to get onto the roll itself.
Even in the USA, if you divide the population into categories, the ‘did not vote’ cohort would win every election.
We are not anywhere near as religious a nation as the USA. Abortion just isn’t really a topic here, because the 10% who’d be against it wouldn’t stand a chance of passing such a change. I think getting rid of compulsory voting would be a more popular policy to start with.
Yep. It could go either way I think.