Austria, Brazil, Germany, and the UK region of Scotland (for devolved parliament and council elections only) have already enfranchised 16-year-olds. We should too.
There’s currently a Parliamentary Inquiry into civics education, engagement, and participation in Australia. Changing the voting age is not in its terms of reference, but a large enough number of submissions calling for that could at least get a broader national conversation started.
(I also plan to put into my submission something about other voting systems and how feeling like your vote actually matters in a way that it largely doesn’t in IRV would be a big help for civic engagement.)
UnfortunateDoorHinge@aussie.zone 7 months ago
An action to make society more democratic is one I can get behind. Few countries can really call themselves democratic.
unionagainstdhmo@aussie.zone 7 months ago
So long as we have elected “representatives” we are not a democracy in the true sense of the word
Deceptichum@sh.itjust.works 7 months ago
Direct democracy is the only real democracy.
“But but you’ll get tyranny of the majority, which clearly doesn’t happen when the majority elect a tyrannical representative”
What we will get is not having to pick a pollie who only aligns with 2 out of 2000 of our views.
zero_gravitas@aussie.zone 7 months ago
- Jean-Jacques Rousseau, The Social Contract (1762)
prex@aussie.zone 7 months ago
There is always these guys.
Kusimulkku@lemm.ee 7 months ago
Representative democracy is a form of democracy. Direct democracy is another form. There’s no “true” form.
dyc3@lemmy.world 7 months ago
16 years olds are pretty impressionable. I know I was. Wouldn’t this kind of change make them more vulnerable to election manipulation?
downpunxx@fedia.io 7 months ago
lol, have you ever asked a 16 year old how they're feeling? then waited 30 minutes and asked them again?