Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

So many reasons to vote

- ANN MCFEATTERS

In 22 democratic nations, voting is mandatory. In Australia, failure to vote without a good reason is punishable by a first-offense penalty of $20, which rises to $50 for each uncast vote thereafter.

In most of these countries, voting is not limited to a week-day work-day ending at 7 p.m., or standing in line for hours in the rain, or requiring a babysitter or leave from work (and loss of pay) or any of the other obstacles imposed on U.S. voters. (Let’s hear it for those evolved states that permit early voting and/or mail-in ballots.)

Some Americans are insistent about their right not to vote. Some say they make a statement by boycotting. Others say they know their vote won’t make a difference. (Tell that to the people of Virginia where a recent single vote gave the legislatur­e to Republican­s.)

There’s no doubt this is a vitally important midterm election. The Senate is controlled by Republican­s. Their party is controlled by Donald Trump, who is increasing­ly amassing power and has well over $100 million to fight for re-election in 2020. The only hope for an alternativ­e is a slight Democratic lead in polls for control of the House. Very slight.

We should ask ourselves what democracy means today. The answer is not necessaril­y what we think.

In recent days the president of the United States has told absolute lies to bend the electorate to his will; thousands have turned out to cheer him on.

He said middle-class Americans will get a new 10 percent tax cut in the next two weeks. Not true. Congress isn’t in session and no such cut is pending, despite feckless Republican­s quickly selling their souls by backing the president’s nonsensica­l rhetoric.

Eager to sell arms to Saudi Arabia to use in its war against Yemen, Trump sided with Saudi Arabia’s phony stories about the slaughter of an American journalist in Turkey, suggesting the 21 murderers from a dictatorsh­ip were “rogue operators.” Trump then lauded a politician convicted of assaulting a reporter.

Trump explained away the caging of small children taken from parents by insisting America’s safety depended on it.

Trump tells bureaucrat­s what to do by Twitter, publicly ridiculing them if they don’t act quickly enough or forcefully enough (setting up a Space Force, trying futilely to find evidence of voter fraud, starting trade wars).

The cult of Trump yearns to believe him; his repetitiou­s lies convince them what he says is true. They insult reporters doing their jobs. They deny the right to vote to people of color.

Voting is not required in America. Voting can be difficult. But those who don’t vote must take responsibi­lity when democracy declines and falls because history proves that will happen.

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