The president whose major policy achievement is mandatory health insurance thinks maybe voting should be mandatory, too.
Asked
how to offset the influence of big money in politics, President Barack
Obama suggested it's time to make voting a requirement.
"Other
countries have mandatory voting," Obama said Wednesday in Cleveland,
where he spoke about the importance of middle class economics, and was
asked about the issue during a town hall.
"It
would be transformative if everybody voted -- that would counteract
money more than anything," he said, adding it was the first time he had
shared the idea publicly.
The clout of millionaires and billionaires in campaign funding has been enormous, and many claim the uber wealthy have undue leverage in politics.
"The
people who tend not to vote are young, they're lower income, they're
skewed more heavily towards immigrant groups and minority groups," Obama
said. "There's a reason why some folks try to keep them away from the
polls."
At least 26 countries have compulsory voting, according to the Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance.
Failure to vote is punishable by a fine in countries such as Australia
and Belgium; if you fail to pay your fine in Belgium, you could go to
prison.
Aside from campaign finance
issues, the United States also grapples with one of the lowest voter
turnout rates among developed countries.
Less than 37% of eligible voters actually voted in the 2014 midterm elections, according to The Pew Charitable Trusts. That means about 144 million Americans -- more than the population of Russia -- skipped out.
But
mandatory voting could bring its own set of problems. Haydon Manning,
associate professor at Flinders University in Australia, said that
country's rules can backfire.
"Turning
the vote out might not be a problem, but wooing disengaged citizens now
requires banal sloganeering and crass misleading negative advertising,"
Manning wrote. "To me, this can diminish the democratic experience for those who take the time to think through the issues."
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