
Photo courtesy of www.blogs.kansas.com
The United States government has, for years, put a premium on the act of voting. The idea is, the more people voting, the better. Are you getting your license renewed? Apply for a voters’ registration! Are you applying for Food Stamps? Go ahead and register to vote! This idea, however, goes completely against the grain of trying to maintain a responsible government. Our Founding Fathers believed in the idea of “quality of vote” versus “quantity of vote,” which is the mantra we have today.
We all know that in the early days of our republic, an entire gender (females) and ethnic group (Blacks) were not allowed to vote. What most of us are not taught, however is that the vast majority of the population (regardless of race) was not allowed to vote in those early years. Voting was largely determined by states and virtually all of them had property ownership requirements that excluded, by many estimates, as much as 90 percent of the population. The discrimination practiced by the early leaders was not nearly as inclined toward race, as it was making sure that those who participate had a vested interest in the process. Those with property had to pay taxes directly, giving them (in the eyes of the early leaders) a right to participate in the process.
The classical economist John Stuart Mill argued that, if any person was receiving money from the government, they should be prohibited from voting until they were financially free from any assistance. This idea would not be merely welfare recipients, but corporate “fat cats” getting subsidies from Uncle Sam. Mill argued that there was no way to maintain a small and reasonable government if people could vote benefits for themselves. It was similar to serving on the board of an organization and being allowed to vote on something that directly benefits you. That would be bad form and everyone would expect you to “abstain.” “Abstain” we all should do if we are eating at the trough.
Unfortunately, that was then, and this is now. Such a proposal would not be politically palpable. What if there was a third way beyond the “anyone with a pulse can vote” mentality pervasive today and the elitist position found earlier in our nation’s history? It is against the law for candidates to campaign for office within a certain distance of voting locations. That is why, when you walk up, you are bombarded with people offering you flyers up to an invisible line. Yet, the single most important information — party affiliation – is actually seen on your ballots. Worse still, we allow people to vote ”straight ticket,” requiring absolutely no thought at all.
To restore integrity in the ballot box, we should remove party affiliation from every ballot entirely and from voting locations. This will require every person who goes in to vote to know exactly for whom they are voting and why. They should not be provided a “cheat sheet” in the form of the ballot for the most important test they take for liberty each election cycle. Those who cry “foul” will be implying their followers cannot read or lack the faculties to make such decisions. What an insult to their constituents. Without party identification, our elections will become a sober task in maintaining our liberty and not a celebration of ignorance. Will we have fewer voters? Most definitely, but we will have more thoughtful voters.
Kevin Price is the host of “Price of Business”, M-F at 11 am on CNN 650 and CBS Radio and can be frequently found in the “Strategy Room” at FoxNews.com. A syndicated columnist whose article appear at Reuters, Chicago Sun Times, USA Today, and other media, his BizPlusBlog.com is ranked in the top 1 percent of all blogs by Technorati.
His articles also appear regularly at AmericanDailyReview.com and RenewAmerica.com, Examiner.com, and others.








Very interesting idea.
how about a completely blank ballot – and the voter has to write in the name of the person they are voting for, and the office for which the person is running. Naturally, misspelled names and offices would be discarded.
Then we would only have really really informed people voting!
I bet if we are creative, we could come up with a way to push popular representation down below 1%, then only the really smartest people would be picking our leaders.
Kevin,
Great article!
I have oft wondered if we shouldn’t just go to a strictly popular vote instead of Electoral College. I have also wondered if we shouldn’t have people put their names on their votes. Is this a privacy violation or is this merely a way to really make people show some backbone in their voting choices?
I agree wholeheartedly with John Stuart Mill and his take on voting. Can you imagine if we could do that today? We would probably never have another liberal President. Oooh, talk about a tingle up the leg!
Nicely done, sir. Definite food for thought.
This is an awesome article. I have been so totally frustrated with the quality of voters today. They don’t even know what the heck they are looking at.
And the blacks all bitch that people are making Obama’s presidency a “race” issue, when the truth of the matter was that almost all the blacks I ran into, know, and talked to were voting for him just because he was “black” (even though the bastard is half white, how convenient for them to foget).
If they had been forced to look at the real issues, be educated about their decision, and had not been on welfare looking for bigger and better hand outs I can guarantee their voting would have looked MUCH different.
I wish we WOULD go back to the old system or that new idea. It definatly has it’s merit.
We need people who know what the hell is going on voting and sharing that info more loudly and to a broader audience.