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Robyn McIntyre
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Apr 20, 2015 06:55PM

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I know. I'm writing a series around the Peterloo Massacre now. Nearly 20 people killed and 200+ wounded when the magistrates sent in armed cavalry to a peaceful demonstration asking for Manchester to have a Member of Parliament. The cavalry targeted women suffragists. That was what the right to representation meant to people and how hard they had to fight.

Why are children in school learnig tons about ancient civilisations and nothing about their recent history, their rights, their duties, the cost of their freedom ?
Perhaps a population of donkeys is easier to "rule". I'm am from Italy, but I see the same luck of interest here as well. Often, sadly, justified by the abovementioned disillusion, or better repulsion, by the current state of politics. I am a mother, and I'll make sure my kid will know what a priviledge being able to vote is. First of all with my example!

As we've seen ONE vote make a difference, as in a tie, so, yep, I like our system and sometimes wonder why other countries don't follow... it's not perfect but is sure beats more of the alternatives in many supposed democratic countries...

I'd 100% support compulsory voting in the UK. It really isn't that much of a terrible imposition to ask people to participate in *choosing their own government*.

While I feel strongly about getting the current leaders out it's tough to know who makes the better argument.
But yes. People fought for the right to vote and now few bother.

I'd 100% support compulsory voting in the UK. It really isn't that much of a terrible impositio..."
I've worked as a casual electoral official (how we manage with compulsory voting is the Electoral Commission employs a lot of people for the election only to act as polling officers. ... and yes, things like you blogs etc get checked to ensure impartiality.....) and one of my best memories involves explaining to a newly naturalized citizen, a refugee from East Temor, that she was to go over to that polling booth and fill in HER preferences. I could explain how to vote but I could not tell her who to vote for... The look on her face as she realized she could vote however she wanted without fear is one of the major reasons I still keep working as a casual official.
To run compulsory voting all you need in manpower... For Federal elections Australia sends polling officers to all her embassies for 2 weeks prior to the election so people overseas can vote. For State and Federsl we open early polling stations for 2 weeks in each each electorate with ballot papers for ALL electorates (we call them absentee voting), we have postal voting, we have mobile voting stations that visit the hospitals and retirement homes, on the day, and we take ordinary and absent votes on the day at every polling booth so that if you are not at home, or near home, you can still vote.
I love our system. .. All prepoll and absentee ballots are sealed and not counted till after close of polling, too.