WHY SHOULD I VOTE?
(from http://www.milwaukeevoters.org/Why%20Should%20I%20Vote.htm)
Many people today are disenchanted with the
democratic process and stay home on Election Day. They believe that their
vote makes no difference and that they can't possibly have an impact on the
electoral process.
The Arithmetic of Voting
How important is a single vote? To make the
math easy, let's talk about 100 people being eligible to decide an issue.
- 100 people are eligible to vote. If ALL
register AND vote, then 51 votes decide the election.
- If only 60 people register to vote
(even though 100 people are eligible to register) AND ALL 60
vote, 31 votes win the election.
- If 60 people register to vote, but
only 30 of them (50%) vote ... then it takes only 16 votes to win
the election.
This is essentially what happened in the 1994
Congressional elections. Many local elections were close. Because many
people did not vote, a small group of active voters controlled the outcome.
When you choose NOT to vote, you give
more clout to every vote that is recorded.
One Vote Makes a Difference
- In 1960, Richard Nixon lost the
Presidential election and John Kennedy won by a margin of less than 1
vote per precinct.
- In 1968, Hubert Humphrey lost the
Presidential race to Richard Nixon by a margin of fewer than 3 votes
per precinct.
- In 1974, Jerry Brown won the race for
California's governor by a margin of fewer than 8 votes per precinct.
- In 1978, Marc Garcia won a senate in the
California State Senate by 90 votes.
- In 1985, Jim Chapman won the First U. S.
Congressional seat in Texas by fewer than 5 votes per precinct.
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