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183 lines
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Plaintext
183 lines
8.8 KiB
Plaintext
What does it mean to cast a "wasted" vote? Why your vote is *always*
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valuable.
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DON'T WASTE YOUR VOTE
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by Steven J. Alexander
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Many people hear about the Libertarian Party and say "I don't want to
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waste my vote." That's quite understandable and commendable; voting is
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the second most important thing in a free country like ours.
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But what does it mean when we say "don't waste your vote?" How should
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we vote so it won't be wasted?
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We waste money when we spend it for something we did not really want.
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We waste time when we use it for an activity that doesn't do us any good.
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We waste our breath when we talk to somebody without convincing him. How do
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we waste our vote?
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Some people say "I won't waste my vote on Jones because he has no
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chance to win." Does this make sense? Is voting a matter of predicting the
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winners?
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In 1984, Mondale ran for president and got 37 million votes. Everyone
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knew that Reagan would be reelected. Did those millions of Americans who
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voted for Mondale all waste their votes? What should they have done?
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In 1976, Reagan and Ford were competing for the presidential
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nomination. The Republican Party chose Ford because they "knew" Reagan had
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no chance to win.
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Ford lost. Four years later, Reagan won. Do we really know who has no
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chance to win?
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In 1948, everyone "knew" that Harry Truman had no chance to win. He
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was way behind in the polls. Yet Truman won. Did the people who voted
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for Truman waste their votes? Did the people who voted against Truman
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waste their votes?
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But why should we vote for somebody just because he (or she) is going
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to win? Do we get a prize if we can guess the winner ahead of time?
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People who voted for Reagan got a prize: four more years of Reagan.
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People who voted for Mondale got ... four more years of Reagan. People who
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voted for David Bergland, the Libertarian candidate for president, got four
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more years of Reagan.
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No matter how we voted, we got the same thing. Even nonvoters got the
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same thing. Voting is not like horse racing; guessing right doesn't change
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the payoff.
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Some people say "I won't waste my vote on Jones because my vote
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couldn't help him win; he's too far behind." Does this make sense? Does a
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vote for one candidate have more value than a vote for another candidate?
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In most congressional districts, the incumbent almost always wins. In
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some cases, nobody even challenges the incumbent. We waste our votes if we
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vote for the incumbent; he has no chance to lose! Our vote has no effect on
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the outcome of that election.
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Let's imagine a more even election campaign of Smith versus Smythe
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versus Jones. In a poll, the month before the vote, Smith gets 45%, Smythe
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gets 40%, and Jones (the Libertarian) gets 15%.
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Jones has no chance to win, right? A vote for Jones is wasted because
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it can't save his campaign. Instead, we should vote for Smith or Smythe
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because that could tip the balance. Right?
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Wrong. How often does a candidate win by one vote? How often does one
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vote tip the balance? The only case I know was Tom Tryon in Calaveras
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County. He became county supervisor by one vote. Tom Tryon is a
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Libertarian.
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If the election goes 45-40-15 like the poll, Smith will win no matter
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how we vote. He will win by thousands or millions of votes. A vote for
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Jones is no more wasted than a vote for Smythe; both of them lost, or a
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vote for Smith, who can win with or without us.
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This is depressing. Why should we vote at all? We don't get a special
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prize for picking the winner, nor can we individually determine the outcome
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of an election.
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Let's try a different approach. Why do we vote? What does it mean? Why
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do we have elections? Most people know the difference between elections and
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horse races. They don't vote just to pick the winners. They study the
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issues and vote to help decide the future of our country. They say "I don't
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want to waste my vote, I want it to have the most effect for the good of
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society."
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Elections serve two purposes. First they decide which candidates will
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hold office. Second they inform those officeholders as to the wishes of
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the people. Also, let's remember that we have elections every year, and we
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all get to vote over and over again. A voting strategy should focus on the
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long term trends. Sometimes, during a campaign, we think that the world
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ends on election day. Actually, the election merely sets the foundation for
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the future, including the election after it.
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Let's imagine the election campaign of Smith versus Smythe versus
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Jones. Smith and Smythe are close in the polls with Jones trailing behind.
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Smith and Smythe each have a chance to win. Jones has "no chance to win."
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(We think.)
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Who should get our vote?
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Let's add some details to the example. Suppose we agree with most of
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Jones's positions and a few of Smythe's positions. On the other hand, we
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believe Smith is wrong on all counts. Are these facts relevant to our
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choice?
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Smythe has the best chance to beat Smith, so we could vote for Smythe
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to avoid letting Smith win. This is the "lesser of two evils" strategy. It
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minimizes our chances of a very bad outcome, but it also minimizes our
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chances of a very good outcome. No guts, no glory. We waste money when we
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spend it for something we didn't really want. Do we waste our vote that
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way?
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Jones has the beliefs and principles closest to our own, so we could
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vote for Jones to best reflect our opinion. This is the "vote your
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conscience" or the "send a message" strategy. It means we are voting for
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somebody who is unlikely to win, but we hope to build a foundation for
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long term improvement in society. Which strategy should we use? Which
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strategy will have the most effect for the good of society? (We could vote
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for Smith and hope he changes his views, but that's a risky approach.)
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The important part of elections is not just who wins, but also what he
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(or she) does in office. If our choice wins, will that have the most effect
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for the good of society?
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If we choose Smythe, the lesser of two evils, and he wins, what will
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he do? Will he emphasize the issues we agree on, or will he emphasize the
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positions we don't like? Will he try to attract voters from Smith's camp by
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adopting some of Smith's positions? We waste time when we use it for an
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activity that doesn't do us any good. If our candidate wins, and we live to
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regret it, have we wasted our vote?
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No politician thinks of himself as the lesser of two evils.
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Politicians tend to think of themselves as statesmen and historic figures.
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They assume that their victories mean mandates and their opponents'
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victories are aberrations. Yet our elections are heavily focused on
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choosing officeholders and not on discovering the wishes of the people. If
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voting our conscience is not fashionable, can we expect integrity from our
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officeholders? If our voting strategies don't look beyond the election, can
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we expect our officeholders to care about anything besides the next
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election?
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Let's remember that elections come every year. Do we want to vote for
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the lesser of two evils every year, year after year, for our whole lives?
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If Smythe wins elections every time, he has no reason to change. We waste
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our breath when we talk to somebody without convincing him. Smythe can get
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our vote without heeding our wishes. He just has to strive to always be the
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second worst candidate.
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This is not what democracy was meant to be. Is that a wasted vote?
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If we choose Jones, and vote our conscience, several things happen.
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First, he probably loses anyway. Smith or Smythe are elected. But the
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election does more than choose a winner. It sends a message to the winner
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as to the wishes of the people. He is bound to notice those people who
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stood up and were counted for Jones. They didn't expect Jones to win, but
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they held strong beliefs and were true to them.
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A voter who is steadfast and true to his or her beliefs will
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eventually win. A shortsighted voter who compromises for crumbs of the
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victor's banquet will have only stale crumbs to show for a lifetime of
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trying.
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No Libertarian yet has been elected to national office or California
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state office. Yet, in the years since the party was formed, gold ownership
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became legal, military draft ended, proposition 13 passed and the tax
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revolt began, Reagan cut taxes, airlines were deregulated, banks were
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deregulated, railroads were deregulated, and trucking was deregulated.
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We didn't do any of it. It was done by the Smiths and Smythes of the
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major parties. They know what it means when someone votes Libertarian. It
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means that ten more people wanted to, but thought it would waste their
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votes.
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Voting Libertarian does us more good than the tally tells. It
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convinces the major parties to pay heed to our principles. It is not a
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wasted vote. The waste is to live a life in a free society, where we can
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speak and vote freely, and to have never spoken our minds.
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