this post was submitted on 21 Jul 2025
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No discrimination in these cases is based on failing people that should be passing or failing based on higher standards than you're applying broadly. Not registered until you pass leads to the other issue I said, people intentionally failing to never have to vote. I personally believe being forced to at least turn up at the polling centre makes a significant difference to the final vote. I would rather some small percentage of votes end up not counted as unreadable than 40%+ of the population opt out of voting.
There's an interesting discussion about whether forcing people who don't want to vote into voting is a good thing.
I definitely think our mandatory voting system has some great benefits, especially that it makes voter suppression far more difficult. But at the end if the day, I've seen electors who couldn't name two federal PM candidates or the party policies of the two main parties. What is the benefit of forcing such people into voting? They clearly don't have an interest in making the correct decision for themselves or our state. So it simply makes the election less effective, turning it more into a gimmicky popularity spectacle than a decision making process.