Today in the United States the
election system is primarily based on two main political parties, Republicans
and Democrats. There are various other political parties such as the Green
party, and the Libertarian party, but they are rarely voted for. This raises
the question of why. In our current political state most people see voting for
third party candidates as a waste of a vote. The general consensus is that only
a member of the two primary parties can win, so why vote for someone you know
won’t win.
The
main question that comes to mind here is what is defined as a wasted vote. Is
it voting for someone you know has no chance to win? Or perhaps most Americans
are already wasting their votes by choosing between the lesser of two evils. In
this video by a third party candidate in the 2008 election Chuck Baldwin
explains the stereotypes that go along with voting for a third party, along
with what he thinks is the actual definition of a wasted vote. In the United
States when we’re not happy with government we continue to flip flop between
Republicans and Democrats in power when we should be looking to other views.
Most Americans continue to vote the same way or flip from one side to the other
every four years still finding no chance. If you ask me that’s the perfect
example of a wasted vote. Instead of placing our vote for the candidate we
think most definitely lines up with our view points and beliefs we choose to
vote for one of two “should win” candidates solely on the fact they’re in one
of the two major parties. If the United States is ever going to move away our
current two party rut we’ll have to change a lot of stereotypes about our votes
and whether or not they are wasted.
In this
article by Brad C.L. he explains some of the hardships for third party
candidates getting their message to voters and name on the ballots. There are
several factors that greatly contribute to the third parties in America being
less known, liked, and voted for. One of the main factors is simply media
exposure. The candidates don’t get the same amount of time or attention from
news corporations or media outlets simply because they are in a third party.
This causes people to be less informed about their policies and who they are.
Another hardship is getting on states ballots. It’s difficult for the
candidates to gain the support needed to be on all the states ballots
especially considering that most require signed petitions given to each state
before they are eligible for the ballots. The greatest hardship may be the
American psyche though. We have the overwhelming thought that if they’re not
Red or\ Blue, they have no chance so we shouldn’t waste our votes.
If
America wants to see real change in our country we need to change our views
about voting down party lines. We need to find a candidate that we like and
that we want to represent us in government, not just hop on a bandwagon and
hope we vote for the winner so our vote counts. In my opinion the biggest waste
of a vote is using it on a candidate you don’t completely support. So let’s
stop wasting our votes on the same cycle over and over and move on to voting by
our personal decision, not by what the majority of polls or stereotypes tell
us.
I feel that there are such things as wasted votes. In my opinion a vote is wasted if the voter is uninformed. If a voter is going in uninformed and unaware of whom they are voting for or why they are voting. That individual should not even vote. We are entitled to the right to vote. Yet that doesn’t mean we need to be informed and educated. We need to as Americans be knowledgeable of who we elect into office.
ReplyDeleteI agree that it is a terrible concept that America pretty much only allows a candidate from one of the two major parties to win elections. If you are a candidate from a third-party, there are more steps you have to take to become a serious candidate. Sometimes, though, we as Americans need to look away from the two-party system. Most of the time, both candidates from the two parties have at least some kind of view or policy that agree with our beliefs, but third-party candidates may have more of what you believe in and may be the better choice, and they should be the ones voted for. America needs to take a closer look at what is best for our country and allow every candidate an equal chance.
ReplyDeleteI think Beau hit the nail on the head when he said a wasted vote is when people are not knowledgeable on who they are voting for and what they are voting and vote for a candidate based just on party and not what they truly stand for. I believe this is the case most of the time. People vote for someone only because it’s who their parents voted for or because they are of the same party. This doesn’t make sense. I also agree with the fact that Americans tend to get caught up in the two-party voting. When this happens people won’t vote for which candidate they truly want and support what that candidate stands for, but for the candidate that has the best chance at beating out the candidate from the other party. It doesn’t seem fair for another third-party candidate to have to go to extremes to be taken seriously and America seems to only vote for the two major parties to win elections.
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