Importance Of Voting Essay

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    Madison Akkaoui English 11 Honors Period 5 Ms.Carvalho 12 January 2017 Every registered citizen in The United States of America has the right to vote, yet there is a need for reformation in individual voting rights, due to there being homeless, racial, and clinically disabled propaganda. The act of voting gives people the ability to express their views, and opinions, from different standpoints. When Thomas Jefferson wrote the words of freedom in the Declaration of Independence, it created political shock

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    governmental decision-making is voting. Voting is a formal expression of preference for a candidate for office or for a resolution of an issue. Voting takes place in the context of a large-scale national or regional election, however, local and community elections can be just as poignant to individual participation in government. Every Australian citizen who is aged 18 years or more can vote in a federal election if validly enrolled and not disqualified from voting. Political participation is the

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    Amendment of the United States Constitution was established and implemented proceeding the Civil War with a specific goal, voting rights. It established the Voting Rights Act of 1965. It dealt with the denial of voting rights in local and national elections because one’s race or previous condition of servitude. It prohibits states from engaging in racial discrimination when it came to voting rights. Furthermore, the amendment grants congress to seek actions, appropriate legislation” if they do not comply

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    International studies shows us how the world is webbed together. It combines economics and government as well as other important issues. I learned about voting in other countries. How Native Americans on reservations lives are dramatically different then the rest of South Dakota, and how refugees have to suffer without a end in sight. In 1832 roughly 57.6% of the total United States Population voted in the presidential election. This percentage contented to rise until 1876 when a record high of

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    Voting and having a sufficient number of eligible voters actually cast a vote to elect government officials is critical for the proper functioning of government in representative democracies like the United States. Moreover, having just a sufficient number of active voters is not enough because in most instances a simple majority of votes of fifty percent plus one (50%-plus 1) is enough to determine the outcome of almost all elections of elected government officials at the local, State and Federal

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    very respectable. In fact, the USA came in at 138 out of 172 countries that hold public elections, per the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance. Many people in the US that don’t vote provide a majority of reasons for not voting, such as: too busy, not interested, or illness/injury, according to statisticbrain.com. There are a few ways for an American citizen to vote. The easiest way, at least in North Dakota, is to bring

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    Voting is viewed as a right in America, but as Hyattville, Maryland Councilman Patrick Paschall stated, “We keep telling youth we want them involved in our city and government, and yet the message we send by denying them the right to vote is that their voice doesn’t matter.” In the United States, citizens are allowed to vote for elected officials and propositions beginning at the age of eighteen. However, any citizen under this age limit is not granted the right to vote in any local, state, or

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    Despite popular opinion that the United States is the greatest democracy in the world, we have shockingly low voter turnout compared to international standards (Desilver). A complicated registration process and strict restrictions on voting consistently discourage and inhibit Americans from exercising their right to vote. Despite this, lawmakers continue to push for and often pass unnecessary legislation limiting the ways in which citizens can register and cast their ballot. Certain demographics

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    party’s interest. By voting against a bill that your party wants you to vote in favor of could be very drastic to your future plans as a Congressmen. The party that your are affiliated with might not want to agree with you on other matter and the whole time that you serve as a Congressmen will only be a constant argument with you and your party and even more problems will arise with the opposing party. If you are to change your political affiliation you will technically still be voting influenced by their

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    through voting for those who share similar ideologies? Other developed countries, such as Australia, have implemented mandatory voting (Document A). With other advanced countries actualizing mandatory voting, should the US follow suit? Implementing mandatory voting would mean that those who are eligible to vote in their country, must do exactly that; if one does not vote, they will face some sort of penalty (most likely a fine). In order to create a society where everyone has a say, voting in the

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