Voter Participation in the United States

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The United States is an inspiration of liberty and hope for nations around the world. It is a nation with citizens who have the unalienable rights of, “Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness,” and a model for how democratic nations should be ordered and maneuvered due to its intrinsic values that are held. Democracy is a system of government where the citizens are responsible for shaping their nation to represent who they are and what they stand for. The people have the ultimate power in the nation. However, as no pure direct democracy exists in any nation, an indirect democracy arises, where people vote to elect representatives, who then in turn make the greater part of decisions for the nation.
From its early period, the United States has obtained an indirect type of democracy, and has always had contentment that its citizens are allowed to vote for their representatives, especially the President. Nevertheless, the amount of citizens that actually vote in nationwide elections has decreased noticeably over the years. Voter participation and turnout has been declining in the United States throughout history. Voter turnout, the percentage of eligible individuals who actually vote (Ginsberg), to this day is lower than it was in the 1900’s. Since 1912, presidential elections have only had about 50 to 65 percent of Americans participate. This means that about half of United States citizens who are eligible and have the freedom to vote have failed to participate in presidential elections. At the end of the nineteenth century voter turnout started plummeting, reaching the 60 percent level by the election of 1912 (Teixeira, 1987). The declining rate of voter participation in the United States is due to voter registration and procedu...

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...ffect of all these reasons, and most likely some reasons that were not discussed, together create the voter turnout in the Unites States to be low. While some of these projected reasons for low voter participation may not be agreed on by everyone, they give the likelihood of optimism for the future, a hope that voter turnout in the United States will increase and show how great our nation’s democracy is.

Works Cited

Ginsberg, Benjamin. "Political Participation and Voting." We the People. An Introduction to American Politics. Ninth ed. New York: W.W. Norton &, 2013. 293-332. Print.

Roberts, Daniel S. Why We Don't Vote: Low Voter Turnout in U.S. Presidential Elections. The University of Tennessee Knoxville. N.p., 2009. Web. 16 Nov. 2013.

Teixeira, Ruy A. Why Americans Don't Vote: Turnout Decline in the United States, 1960-1984. New York: Greenwood, 1987. Print.

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