top | item 28452452

(no title)

gregsq | 4 years ago

I don’t see this as anywhere near the same thing though. These so called ‘donkey votes’ are derided, and categorised as together with voting errors and other invalid voting forms. The right to withhold your vote is as fundamental as the right to withold your labour. Voter turnout is an important metric in its own right, and is observed tactically in, say, the UK. Compulsory voting simplifies competition, and destroys some forms of it. In particular, the ‘mandate’

discuss

order

rapind|4 years ago

I highly doubt most non-voters are intentionally "witholding" their vote. I think it's more often just laziness or lack of access (voting during work day etc.).

It has to be incredibly more meaningful to have statistics on how many people intentionally said "screw you" with a vote for "ficus" or w/e.

caf|4 years ago

A donkey vote isn't a blank ballot.

It's a ballot that's just been numbered unthinkingly from top to bottom.

tacocataco|4 years ago

Are they counted as votes? That would mean the person at the top of the ballot have an advantage because of these donkey votes.

girvo|4 years ago

> In particular, the ‘mandate’

The amount of electorates that swung, and the percentages that the winning representative (and party) received mean that's not true at all, in my opinion anyway. Happy to be convinced otherwise, but the "mandate" still exists.

Nursie|4 years ago

And in democracies like the UK, people who don’t vote are disregarded as lazy and ignored too.

I agree, you should be able to withhold as a protest, in practice it’s 100% meaningless.

chrisseaton|4 years ago

They aren’t ignored - parties try to woo them over.