Reactions to Voting

First, an issue I have long thought about. I think that the option to cast a straight party ballot should be removed. Voters should be voting for candidates, not parties. I have no objections to a voter going down the ballot and voting only for the candidates from a single party, but they should be required to go down the ballot, not just cast a straight party ticket.

On to my reactions.

I have never used the electronic voting machines before and I was pleasantly surprised by one feature – I got to read the printout of my ballot before it was officially cast. I thought that was great. Assuming that the very paper I read (but could not touch since it was behind a window in the voting machine) is the same paper that would be read in the event of a manual recount, or an audit of the votes (which I believe/hope is mandatory) then I am confident that there is no way, short of collusion, to manipulate actual votes cast.

This means that the machines cannot be responsible for any problems related to the results of an election where they are used. Admittedly this only applies to this model of voting machine. I can’t speak for any other model. This also says nothing about efforts which discourage voters from casting votes or efforts which seek to disenfranchise specific portions of the electorate. Those are separate problems.

As for the ballot itself – I was disappointed with the number of offices in which there was no Democratic candidate. It is a sad statement when one of the major parties fails to even field a candidate. The worst section of the ballot was where I got to “vote” for county officials. Almost without exception, at the county level there was a Republican candidate running unopposed. I don’t mean no to say there was no Democratic challenger, I mean no challenger at all. If it were not for the fact that we could put challengers on the ballot it would be like voting for Saddam Hussein when he was in power in Iraq – no challenger means that he won between 95% and 100% of the vote – it’s not an election.


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3 responses to “Reactions to Voting”

  1. Jason Avatar

    Straight ticket voting was just removed as an option in Missouri. I like it.Your experience with unopposed candidates was similar to mine – every county office has one candidate (the incumbent). In every case the office holder is a Democrat. Based on my experience working in politics, I can say that the parties always want to run a candidate, but can’t always find a willing accomplice. I agree that it’s always best to have opposition in any election. Voters should always have a choice.

  2. David Avatar

    I hope the straight ticket option gets removed in Utah soon.I wonder how willing you would have to be for the Republicans in your county to support you in a run, or the Democrats in my county to support me in a run?This sounds like the county level of government is small enough to not receive much attention and large enough that few people want to run for the offices.It’s interesting to hear that my county is not alone.

  3. […] thinking about the importance of voting my mind led me back to a personal belief that voting a straight party ticket with one mark is a bad thing for government. I have nothing against someone choosing to cast all their votes for one party, but […]

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