Just a thought: How about we nix Presidents’ Day and make Election Day a national holiday instead?
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Just a thought: How about we nix Presidents’ Day and make Election Day a national holiday instead?
@Strandjunker or you could vote on Saturday or Sunday like the rest of the civilised world
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@benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker they work in Australia where everyone has to vote and mark their preferences. Voting takes place on a weekend so most people are off. They have mobile teams to visit hospitals and aged care facilities as well as remote communities. You just have to front up and collect the paperwork.
It is said that politicians have to say in the centre if they want to appeal to the majority. The system supports that.
@Lats @benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker In Graz, Austria. When there's an election, we have >270 voting places in the city. That's for a total population of about 300k or around 200 k eligible voters. Your voting place is right around the corner. And you can still mail it in if you like.
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@benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker they work in Australia where everyone has to vote and mark their preferences. Voting takes place on a weekend so most people are off. They have mobile teams to visit hospitals and aged care facilities as well as remote communities. You just have to front up and collect the paperwork.
It is said that politicians have to say in the centre if they want to appeal to the majority. The system supports that.
@Lats @benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker And mail in voting too. And you can't pester/advertise too close to the venue. And you can get a democracy sausage afterwards! And as you say, the popular parties are centre right and centre left. On the downside we aren't getting a full on socialist party government any time soon, on the plus side we won't get full on MAGA, if they aren't close to the centre they aren't getting in. And our centre is to the left of the US Democrats anyway.
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@Lats @benroyce @Strandjunker Heaven forbid we HELP people participate in our so called perfect democracy!
Hell naw! Those people without cars? They should pick themselves up by their bootstraps and GET IT DONE!
/s - of course, the USA is so fundamentally broken on so many levels.
@nuintari @Lats @benroyce @Strandjunker Not really.
It only really became that way because of a certain president ruining it im the 1980s. Basically undoing what could have been progress.
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Just a thought: How about we nix Presidents’ Day and make Election Day a national holiday instead?
@Strandjunker How about both?
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@benroyce
Here in Australia where voting is mandatory it puts the onus on the government to make voting possible for everyone.
Elections happen on a Saturday, employees must be given time off to vote, there are booths available and accessible everywhere (usually the local school hall, which gives schools an opportunity to fundraise, hence the traditional "democracy sausage") and they provide pre-polling in the week leading up to the election. Generally wait times that are short enough for you to be able to vote within half an hour.
At the last election in informal votes were 5.6% of the vote. That includes dick votes, but the majority are votes where someone made a mistake (we have ranked choice voting so you need to have a valid sequence of numbers).
@nuintari @Strandjunker -
@benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker they work in Australia where everyone has to vote and mark their preferences. Voting takes place on a weekend so most people are off. They have mobile teams to visit hospitals and aged care facilities as well as remote communities. You just have to front up and collect the paperwork.
It is said that politicians have to say in the centre if they want to appeal to the majority. The system supports that.
@Lats @benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker
Worth adding that here in Australia, if you expect to not be able to vote on the day (overseas / working / volunteering), you can vote in advance at set locations. I think embassies will also take votes. On the day, if in an urban area you can walk to your local polling booth. There is NO excuse here for not voting. By memory the informal vote is around 10%
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@Lats @benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker In Graz, Austria. When there's an election, we have >270 voting places in the city. That's for a total population of about 300k or around 200 k eligible voters. Your voting place is right around the corner. And you can still mail it in if you like.
@twobiscuits @Lats @benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker Last three general elections in NZ I've voted at:
offical voting station, in my district;
pop-up voting station in a train station concourse, outside my district, on my way to work;
pop-up voting station in a shopping mall, outside my district, on my lunch break.
All of these stations had the full hardcopy voter roll for the entire metropolitan area of >1.5 million people. If you were from further away you could still submit your vote, but it would go in an outer envelope to your home town where it would be counted. -
@nuintari @Lats @benroyce @Strandjunker Not really.
It only really became that way because of a certain president ruining it im the 1980s. Basically undoing what could have been progress.
@cameron_bosch @nuintari @benroyce @Strandjunker I wrote this on another thread, it relates to the underpinnings of the current mess.
https://aus.social/@Lats/115959280349232730 -
A 4 day weekend so everyone has a chance to vote.
@SpaceLifeForm @Strandjunker Let's make it week off!
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@Lats @benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker
Worth adding that here in Australia, if you expect to not be able to vote on the day (overseas / working / volunteering), you can vote in advance at set locations. I think embassies will also take votes. On the day, if in an urban area you can walk to your local polling booth. There is NO excuse here for not voting. By memory the informal vote is around 10%
@daveburb @Lats @benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker most people vote early now. It's much easier to pop past an early polling booth than deal with the polling day crowds (queues can be more than 10 minutes on polling day! Unpossible!)
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@benroyce
Here in Australia where voting is mandatory it puts the onus on the government to make voting possible for everyone.
Elections happen on a Saturday, employees must be given time off to vote, there are booths available and accessible everywhere (usually the local school hall, which gives schools an opportunity to fundraise, hence the traditional "democracy sausage") and they provide pre-polling in the week leading up to the election. Generally wait times that are short enough for you to be able to vote within half an hour.
At the last election in informal votes were 5.6% of the vote. That includes dick votes, but the majority are votes where someone made a mistake (we have ranked choice voting so you need to have a valid sequence of numbers).
@nuintari @Strandjunker@stib @benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker It might be worth posting a picture of some of the lengths we go to to ensure everyone can vote, no matter where you live.
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i used to disagree
that if you make voting mandatory, people will draw dicks on their ballot or do joke votes
and you do see that in places where voting is mandatory
but i've changed my view
you can't force people to care, yes
but enough say they "care" but then won't do fucking shit to prove it in an extremely effective way: by voting
so now i think getting enough of those lazy entitled assholes off their asses and voting outweighs the sabotage/ vandalism effect
@benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker I am astonished how difficult the US makes it for people to vote. Having to travel long distances and then having to queue for long periods to vote.
And running it on a working day when many people simply can’t get the time off to vote -
i used to disagree
that if you make voting mandatory, people will draw dicks on their ballot or do joke votes
and you do see that in places where voting is mandatory
but i've changed my view
you can't force people to care, yes
but enough say they "care" but then won't do fucking shit to prove it in an extremely effective way: by voting
so now i think getting enough of those lazy entitled assholes off their asses and voting outweighs the sabotage/ vandalism effect
Meh, people voting who have no clue who to vote for will just go where the wealthy pay to lead them. Some boring rich white man with a pasty fake smile and a perfect family... again.
CC: @nuintari@bsd.cafe @Strandjunker@mstdn.social -
@daveburb @Lats @benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker most people vote early now. It's much easier to pop past an early polling booth than deal with the polling day crowds (queues can be more than 10 minutes on polling day! Unpossible!)
@moz @daveburb @Lats @nuintari @Strandjunker
all the australians and #newzealand ers in the replies talking about their #votingsystem s:
i would feel remiss if i didn't repost #thejuicemedia video that made me fall in love with #australia (i love you too kiwis, please don't laser eye me)
(note for americans: what australians call #preferentialvoting we call #rankedchoicevoting)
you want this too americans?
THEN #VOTE, YOU LAZY ENTITLED WHINY ASSHOLES
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@twobiscuits @Lats @benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker Last three general elections in NZ I've voted at:
offical voting station, in my district;
pop-up voting station in a train station concourse, outside my district, on my way to work;
pop-up voting station in a shopping mall, outside my district, on my lunch break.
All of these stations had the full hardcopy voter roll for the entire metropolitan area of >1.5 million people. If you were from further away you could still submit your vote, but it would go in an outer envelope to your home town where it would be counted.@rupert @twobiscuits @Lats @benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker voting at the NZ embassy in Sydney was similarly easy. They had signs on the footpath and all the way up to the 20th floor, then a very efficient system for actually voting. Good enough that I don't remember it because it was so quick and easy.
Voting is important to the governments of Oz and NZ, they *want* people to vote.
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@benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker I am astonished how difficult the US makes it for people to vote. Having to travel long distances and then having to queue for long periods to vote.
And running it on a working day when many people simply can’t get the time off to vote@peterbrown @nuintari @Strandjunker
that's by design
and lazy asshole americans respond by just giving up
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@benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker I am astonished how difficult the US makes it for people to vote. Having to travel long distances and then having to queue for long periods to vote.
And running it on a working day when many people simply can’t get the time off to vote@peterbrown @benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker I periodically suggesting using "percentage of the population who vote" as a measure of how democratic a country is.
By that measure the US falls from "at risk democracy" to "somewhat democratic", but amusingly Aotearoa with optional voting matches Australia with compulsory because it lets more people vote.
It's contentious because to most people not letting everyone vote is just obvious common sense
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@Strandjunker or you could vote on Saturday or Sunday like the rest of the civilised world
@xgebi @Strandjunker Except, they don't usually have the sunday off ... like (most of) the rest of the world.... mh
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@benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker I am astonished how difficult the US makes it for people to vote. Having to travel long distances and then having to queue for long periods to vote.
And running it on a working day when many people simply can’t get the time off to vote@peterbrown @benroyce @nuintari @Strandjunker I can't believe that you have to register to vote, and that you have to keep checking if you are still registered to vote!
