Linked by Howard Fosdick on Thu 8th Nov 2012 20:12 UTC
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RE[2]: A sad state for the US to be in
by unclefester on Fri 9th Nov 2012 05:04
in reply to "RE: A sad state for the US to be in"
Voting isn't actually mandatory in Australia. You are merely required to attend a polling booth and get your name marked off. What you do with the ballot paper after that is your own business.
Failing to attend a polling station attracts a very small fine. Nothing happens if you don't pay the fine.
RE[3]: A sad state for the US to be in
by Brendan on Fri 9th Nov 2012 09:39
in reply to "RE[2]: A sad state for the US to be in"
Hi,
Voting isn't actually mandatory in Australia. You are merely required to attend a polling booth and get your name marked off. What you do with the ballot paper after that is your own business.
Failing to attend a polling station attracts a very small fine. Nothing happens if you don't pay the fine.
Failing to attend a polling station attracts a very small fine. Nothing happens if you don't pay the fine.
I know (from personal experience) that if you don't pay the fine (and don't have a valid reason/excuse), eventually you do (silently - you're not informed of it at the time) get an arrest warrant. The police have better things to do than actually arrest you, but it does show up on things like police checks, etc.
I'd assume (but don't know) that if you ever get arrested for any reason they'd append any outstanding "failure to vote" charges to your other charges.
- Brendan





Member since:
2007-02-18
Australia gets laughed at for its mandatory voting at the Federal and State levels, but I think it's worked well. Yes, mandatory voting in a democracy is a logical contradiction blah blah blah.