King Lear, on 05 May 2020 - 06:55 PM, said:
Tavvar, on 05 May 2020 - 06:37 PM, said:
Yeah that's what I mean by deliberate disenfranchisement. And (purely off my own personal observation, rather than any basis in data or anything) lots people who don't have barriers to voting are happy with the status quo because they think the people who aren't voting will vote for the party they don't vote for because they're poor and stupid. And that's independent of the party they identify with. I know people in various places in the world who don't vote for a variety of reasons, but I've never met people who actively try to discourage others from voting before. (I mean, I'm sure they exist, it just seems so normalised here.)
I think the voter suppression in the US boils down to the fact that increased turnout tends to lead to Democratic wins, while Republicans tend to win with lower turnout. We should want everyone to vote, if you can't appeal to a majority in the district/state/country, maybe you should reconsider what you're selling, rather than suppress the vote so you still win. The US has a long history of voter suppression, and my understanding is that much of that is tied to racial tensions in the country (Jim Crow to Civil Rights Act to the Supreme Court saying the CRA isn't needed anymore...) So I think some of the issue for people is that they don't want "those people" (the Other, changing based on who is saying it) to vote. I just want higher turnout, if the party I don't like wins with higher turnout, then that means more people wanted them, so be it. But we like to stop people from voting, then the Senate weights power to the less populous, rural states, and the Electoral College does the same, so even with high turnout the Republicans can win nationally because of how our voting system is set up.