Importance of Voting Essay

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    identification. Several people believe that voter turnout will decrease with the new laws and cause more harm than good. However, photo identification laws are a necessity because the identification is versatile, the laws prevent illegal immigrants from voting, and fraud is actually reduced. First, most picture identifications can easily be obtained and can be used elsewhere, such as a driver’s license or even license to carry a handgun. Some believe the identification laws will reduce voter…

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    American citizens should be required to vote in national election. Most people today, young especially, don’t really care what happens in elections and are not active when it comes to voting. But, as their duty as a civilian should be to vote. People need to understand that the right to vote was not free, it came at a cost. People fought for that right and now it is being taken for granted. In the article “Telling Americans to Vote, or Else”, on paragraph 10, it says “We don’t know what the…

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    Election Integrity

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    This Wednesday, the New York Times published a story about a presidential nominee, Mr. Jeffrey Gerrish. The story shows how Gerrish voted illegally in the last presidential election, due to his moving from Virginia to Maryland, but still voting in Virginia when November 8th came around. Virginia does give a grace period of thirty days after moving out of the state to vote, but Garrish had moved prior to the 30-day mark. The article then goes on to discuss the Presidential Advisory Commission on…

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    country. If we forego our responsibilities, our rights could be lost as well. Our main responsibility is to vote. Be it a mayoral election, a state government election, or the Presidential Election, our thoughts and opinions are heard through the voting process, and it is only right to let them be heard. In addition, all citizens must obey the laws set forth. These principles were put into practice for our protection, as well as the…

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    fathers of America started their nation, they created the Electoral College to vote for the president. They did not trust people to have enough information to make the right decision in electing the president. For this reason, the citizens are actually voting for educated politicians who votes for the president. But many people have argued as time passed on whether or not this was a fair system. The Electoral College should be abolished because it provides political inequality for many voters…

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    the Reform Act of 1832 increased the electorate from around 366,000 to 650,000, which was about 18 per cent of the total adult-male population in England and Wales. The vast majority of the working classes, as well as women, were still excluded from voting and the Act failed to introduce a secret ballot. The working classes felt betrayed by an act which made no real difference to their lives.” The reform also redistributed parliament seats to make it equal to population dividing the districts…

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    Eligibility To Vote

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    There is a great prospect you are an American who has full eligibility to vote in US elections. The opportunity to vote is both a matter of national responsibility as well as a personal opportunity to shape the world in which we live. While it isn't a matter of over-the-top nationalism we feel comfortable in stating, as an American voter you also have opportunity and responsibility to shape humankind. If you need an example of our point, spread a few minutes throughout your day reading a few…

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    Voter Impression Analysis

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    happen if these bills pass. In small and major elections, voter fraud is something the states are trying to minimize. In order for this to happen, the states pass laws to avoid fraud, but in many cases, these laws prevent certain types of people from voting or scaring them off. In North Carolina, the voter suppression tactic is very recent. There was a law that was passed called the House Bill 589 that was clearly racially biased and bigoted by the writers. The law was passed on July 25, 2013,…

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    Representative Democracy

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    Is it fair for a state with a population of only 500,000 to have more voting power over a state with a population of over 37 million? That is the reality in the United States. The constitution and political system in the U.S have many aspects that are both democratic and non-democratic. Democratic can be defined as “favoring or characterized by social equality; egalitarian” or in other words, fair; whereas undemocratic can be defined as the opposite (“democratic”). When considering the system of…

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    The primary motivation of any politician is election, and by extension, reelection. Republicans, for example, tend to run on a anti/small government platform. It is politically advantageous for the general public to believe in the ineffectiveness of government, if it as platform that politicians can benefit from. The Submerged State discusses how many social programs which are funded by taxpayer dollars, for example, the Earned Income Tax Credit, which is not widely recognizable to the general…

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