Don't bother to vote again, it only encourages them.
Itsme | 28.04.2008 06:23 | Social Struggles | London
You can't change a play by shuffling the players. It is in the interests of government to maintain status quo instead of trying to improve our outmoded system. At the last general election the present government only received 22% support from the electorate and more than a third didn't bother to vote at all. How can that be claimed as a democratic mandate to govern?
Probably what politicians fear most is a low turnout as it undermines their democratic credibility. Among the many reasons not to vote it has now been revealed that there have been at least 42 convictions for electoral fraud in the UK in the last seven years. We all know too about the various scams MPs use to line their pockets. As soon as one form of sleaze is discovered another seems to take its place. Here's a thought too, under modern legislation, which also limits freedom of assembly and expression, the Suffragettes would undoubtedly have be classed as terrorists.
For more information see:
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/04/368818.html
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/7370025.stm
For more information see:
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/04/368818.html
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/7370025.stm
Itsme
Comments
Hide the following 8 comments
womens guilds,suffragettes were fighting for voting
28.04.2008 08:34
Now lets get out there& get some zapatista coffee
greens syndicalist, cooperative worker, sherwood, ICA,IWW
timewasting.
28.04.2008 09:21
nodebates
So you want to stay in a little hole in the ghetto?i don't
28.04.2008 10:44
Nestor Godwin
elections
28.04.2008 11:47
However a few things stand out. When a government is left wing (relative to the mainstream not revolutionaries) it pushes the political debate to the left, so in Venezuala people talk about community and workers councils, whereas before Chavez was elected not to privatise natural resources was considered left wing.
We must stop the BNP no matter what, with a mixture of tactics, one of which is ensuring that people turn out to vote against them. Any high vote for the BNP is a victory in which they can claim they represent "white" people.
Revolutionaries can use elections as a platform for their views on the world.Furthermore to provide an electoral challenge to the mainstream parties can divide the "protest votes" of people who are disillusioned and might vote BNP.
Marxist?
I for one am not voting.
28.04.2008 12:52
Even if I was registered (which I am tempted to wait until the council threaten me with a £1000 fine), I would have spolit my ballot in the absence of a Green or non-Labour, non-Respect socialist candidate, either way, makes no difference in the end.
disillusioned with the sham which is party politics
Don't Vote!
28.04.2008 14:18
Ditto and it lame how many times I heard women going on about I have to vote because of the suffragettes etc. Then how about voting by writing on the ballot paper No Vote instead of the letter x. Simple
loppy
vote
28.04.2008 16:00
http://www.newswales.co.uk/?section=Politics&F=1&id=11088
nobody
And if we don't vote ...
28.04.2008 19:06
I can certainly appreciate the tactical voting side of things, but ... unless the political system is changed from a First Past the Post and/or the mainstream voting electorate decide to spoil their ballots en masse, our little refusal actions will amount to diddley-squat.
It makes more tactical sense to exploit the system as it is and throw our small but not trivial weight behind the least deplorable of the politicians/parties until the system can begin to swing (vaguely) in the direction we prefer. Once that happens, then fine let's re-evaluate the situation and consider tactical non-voting. The UK is not ready for such radical tactics yet. That's presumably why most of us - the self-proclaimed anarchists - haven't totally disrupted the social order yet. Our numbers are as yet too small to create a critical mass. But, those numbers are growing ... slowly but surely, as each successive reign of government sells us out down the corporate and toxic anti-life river.
As Sun Tzu would have counselled: there is a time to act and a time to act without moving. Right now, we are probably better off adopting the second option, until the time is right to act with full movement.
Doubting Thomas