What do you mean “cling to the idea they can’t be reached?” A huge portion of political spending goes towards trying to increase turnout (of the people likely to vote for you).
34% of the US population doesn't vote. Why do polticalitcians cling to the idea that these voters can't be reached?
Submitted 8 hours ago by Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.world to nostupidquestions@lemmy.world
Comments
palebluethought@lemmy.world 8 hours ago
TheButtonJustSpins@infosec.pub 8 hours ago
Could make it mandatory like Australia.
Of course, many in the political space are trying to limit voting, so…
SolidShake@lemmy.world 7 hours ago
Americans would cry about mandatory voting. World’s biggest snowflakes, I’m sure if that was proposed they’d just say "ugh but the constitution, freedom and stuff, stupid libs "
Tanoh@lemmy.world 3 hours ago
Personally I think mandatory voting is a bad idea. It will not make then suddenly care, they will just vote for lolrolfcopter party.
The US does a lot of bad things around voting, but it being on a workday is probably the biggest hurdle. Most other countries have it on a weekend or holiday. That means that most people can go vote and not have to chose between potentially getting fired and vote. Which, to no surprise mostly affects lower income voters.
Also combined with the witch hunt on mail in voting makes it very hard for lower income people to vote. Which is by design.
Asafum@feddit.nl 4 hours ago
There is actually some evidence that musk was unfortunately successful at reaching some of these people. There was a lot of talk about “strange” ballots that only voted for Trump and nothing else, usually called “bullet ballots.” Well apparently part of musks outreach plan was getting to low propensity voters and telling them “don’t worry if it’s confusing, don’t worry about knowing the candidates, the only thing we need is a vote for Trump and he’ll fix everything.”
It seems like it worked out for them… :(
NatakuNox@lemmy.world 5 hours ago
Because that would require a lot of work, and 99.99% of politicians are in it for the power and money. Not to actually help their constituents.
Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.world 5 hours ago
I guess that’s fair and they know they’re never going to be able on the promised they make.
Ledericas@lemm.ee 1 hour ago
less people voting helps conservatives, thats why they use disenfranchisement, voter suppression and gerrymandering in the states, plus the all the propaganda “your vote doesnt matter” is drilled into peoples heads.
los_chill@programming.dev 5 hours ago
Because one party doesn’t want them to vote and voter supression campaigns have become extremely powerful. And it goes beyond the beurocratic tactics like voter IDs. Apathy, cynicism, and distrust are also part of the right-wing propaganda. Opposition parties fight an uphill battle to engage more voters.
pimento64@sopuli.xyz 4 hours ago
/thread
FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.website 7 hours ago
I have sympathy for non-voters in the US. Not so much out of principle but because of how it is done. Voting takes place on a Tuesday. That’s because in ye olden days you had to allow people to attend church on Sunday before making the trip on horseback to participate in the election. That’s a cute tradition but clashes with the way the economy works today. People are very dependent on their low-wage jobs that they can be fired from easily. If you’re working two of those jobs to make ends meet, you may not have the “luxury” to skip work to go and vote on a normal weekday. That luxury often includes having to fill in a booklet of stuff that’s on the ballot. You’re not just voting on a president, a senator, or a congressperson. You may be asked your option on a plebiscite, a judge, a sheriff, a school board, etc. It is overinflated in my view and explains long slow moving lines at ballot stations that you don’t often see elsewhere. And that’s after a possibly Kafkaesque registration process to be eligible in the first place or to get mail-ins in some states. It is almost designed to keep people away. Maybe you’re taking these structural problems as something “politicians cling to.”
Make election day a public holiday that forces businesses who are open anyway to allow all their employees to go and vote.
BeefPiano@lemmy.world 6 hours ago
A lot of those low-wage workers don’t get federal holidays off. Ever go to a liquor store on Independence Day? Or a restaurant on Veterans Day? Or fill up your gas tank on Washington’s Birthday?
A better system is universal early and mail-in voting with as few impediments as possible. If you need to require identification, that ID needs to be free. There should be no monetary barriers to voting.
FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.website 2 hours ago
I don’t mind your suggestion. I think universal mail-ins are a good idea. At the same time, I have an inkling that you didn’t read my comment all the way to the end.
HappySkullsplitter@lemmy.world 7 hours ago
Because that group likely thinks both options are terrible and think it’s a pointless waste of time
Ultimately proven correct
timbuck2themoon@sh.itjust.works 4 hours ago
Self fulfilling prophecy.
ToadOfHypnosis@lemm.ee 7 hours ago
They need to just put voting in with taxes. Everyone files taxes and if they aren’t at least filing them, then they shouldn’t vote. Setting up in person poling is expensive and takes a ton of volunteering and is a rush to happen over time. The IRS is already solid at record keeping and the infrastructure for data collection is there. We don’t need years of campaigning. Plus, it would kill the horse race aspect of things if the votes were all tallied as they go. I think it would make the whole system easier and would help with any voter verification issues. No one is filing taxes in duplicate to vote more than once. Lol
rwdf@lemmy.world 6 hours ago
But voting should be secret and confidential. Plus, how do you ensure someone isn’t voting on someone else’s behalf?
GluWu@lemm.ee 4 hours ago
If you make less than $11,600 in 2024 you don’t file taxes because there’s no federal tax on that. So yeah, take away peoples voting rights because they’re poor. Great fucking idea, so progressive.
ToadOfHypnosis@lemm.ee 4 hours ago
I thought you still had to file regardless, even if you aren’t paying anything. I filed when I was in college made under that limit working part time. Got money refunded from my taxes paid because I was below the poverty line.
Skullgrid@lemmy.world 6 hours ago
Because every time is someone’s first time, and due to voter registration being necessary a zillion years before the actual vote, no one specifies that and runs "VOTE ON NOV N^TH^ " ads a week before the election day.
circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org 6 hours ago
As others have said, this seems like an ill-formed question. Do you have reason to believe that politicians “cling to the idea that these voters can’t be reached”?
reksas@sopuli.xyz 18 minutes ago
maybe they just consider those people successfully suppressed