vendic wrote:To be honest, I have no idea. i really don't.
I was initially not happy with the Australian system of compulsory voting. After seeing the problems here, all I can say is that compulsory voting is way better than voluntary. Of course Australia also has the STV system and the US uses first past the post. That makes a difference too.
I never liked the term "first past the post" because it sounds like there's a time element, which there isn't.
There are multiple parties in a Australia's parliamentary system, right? In the US, the two party system might make compulsory voting look like a power-grab by the oligarchy to justify their future actions by forcing the appearance of a mandate. Combine compulsion of some groups of voters, with the suppression of others and it's a recipe for inciting civil disobedience. The luxury of apathy is what keeps this country from breaking out in civil strife. Take that away at the risk of everything.
I think there would need to be a lot of different parties that actually make it into Congress, for people to think compulsory voting results in more choice, instead of less choice and less liberty. Maybe such a law would inspire more parties and give them a chance, if people have to vote. But it would be difficult to overcome the status quo. And it won't prevent people from throwing away their vote, but instead of being mad at a few tens of thousands of people, people who gripe about the results will have to be mad at a several tens of millions of people.