Mandatory voting isn't going to work the way you think it will. Back people into a corner and tell people who don't give a shit about politics they have to vote Or Else just means they're more likely to throw away their vote on either the incumbent, whoever appears to be in the lead, or base the vote on something completely arbitrary like whoever is the best looking candidate or whatever. True freedom means giving people the right to throw away their rights. Otherwise you edge closer and closer to tyranny and oppression, which, yes, is a common criticism against the system in Australia.
Another regulation to be put in place, any polling about whomever is in what lead is not allowed to happen by the media. There's already plenty of credible analysis that polling & predicting who is in whatever lead affects the outcome and is a form of bias. Regulation needs to be put in place so that media cannot skew things by predictive analysis reporting or polling about it.
We'll have to make sure all photos, videos, holographic representations are as realistic, undoctored, unflattering as possible to even the playing field.
If you want to not vote, people still do that in Australia. Why you would want to "Not Participate" is beyond me.
Now, I get it, voter apathy can hurt democracy, and certainly some of the less than pleasant world leaders in history gained power in democracies as a result of voter apathy and a disinterested populace not bothering with elections, but it is a necessary evil of democracy. People will vote if they care enough about the issues at hand. At the risk of bringing real world politics into this, just look at the 2020 election in the US, which saw record numbers of first time voters, including many of whom were in their forties or fifties. People will vote when there's something to make them give a damn. The trick to getting people to vote is to present issues that matter to them, that make them want to go vote. Not forcing them into the voting booth with the threat of consequences if they don't.
None of the consequences are "Life Threatening" in any way, shape, or form. They're the same level of consequences as in Australia.
And here's a fun fact, a majority of the people who took part in the January 6 riot on Capitol Hill, did not vote themselves. So if there had been mandatory voting in the US last year, you could have ended up with a second term of Trump. Food for thought.
And if you had a better informed populace, you'd have a completely different Executive management system like a "Executive Council" similar to the
Federal Council of Switzerland. Instead of having a single leader like a President / Prime Minister / etc.
In my 26th Century "Head Canon", the concept of a single seat of power controlling the Executive Branch of the UFP Government has been abolished across all of the UFP at every level of government. (Federal / State / Regional / County / City / Local / etc).
The Swiss got it right IMO. The Executive Branch needs a small council with 9x seats to run the Government.
- "Winner Take All / First Past the Post" needs to be abolished for all Representative Democracies. That's the WORST thing to happen to modern Representative Democracies IMO.
- Proportional Representation per seat with a unlimited # of candidates and every candidate going up to the Executive Council with the voting power that they amassed from their constituency is the only accurate solution. You have no way of "Skewing" or manipulating the "Vote". Proportional Representation per seat needs to be applied to every representative seat across the government that is elected. That means Executive Council, Congress, etc. Apply this 'Proportional Representation' per Seat to EVERY level (Federal, State, Region, County, City, Local, etc) of government for every elected office.
- Yes I know that means more people in office with ≤ 1.0 voting power per seat for the combined representatives of each seat. That's by design and meant to distribute power and make sure no one person has too much power when representing their region and representing the UFP.
Instead of having 1 person take all the power, everybody gets to go into power with the voting power allocated to them by all the constituents in their region that they're voted from. This prevents alot of the whining that we hear about constantly from any side. No more "My person lost, and this person isn't my president".
We have the technology to do that RIGHT NOW, we just need to get away from the overy complicated BS that is the current system that is corrupt, skewed, and run by the dumbest method "Winner Take All / First Past the Post". We need to go "Old School" and have independent Voter ID#'s assigned to all citizenry.
Then each Citizen gets to vote and allocate their 100 Integer Points to any candidates they want and split up their 100 Integer Points in any which way, that means their sum total point allocation only needs to be ≤ 100 points.
As far as the 2020 election is concerned, everybody who ran for the Executive Seat would've gone up into the Executive Council with voting power equivalent to what the constituency allocated to them. And there would be FAR more candidates then the stupid Dog & Pony show that we saw.
+ Also, for the 9x Executive Council seats:
- There is a 12x year cumulative Term Limit
- 3x Seats have a 12x year Term
- 2x Seats have a _6x year Term
- 2x Seats have a _4x year Term
- 2x Seats have a _2x year Term
With non Consecutive-Terms allowed to prevent the "Incumbent effect" and Elections every other year, you get people cycling in and out of the Executive Council making it MUCH harder for corruption to spread and manipulate the government at the highest level.
Exactly. Freedom means being able to make choices people won't agree with, including not participating in what others deem important.
You were always free to do that, but it's dumb and foolish to do that.
Too many people whine about the government without ever even voting or doing their basic research.