Pros And Cons Of Convenience Voting

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While convenience is of immense importance and influences voter turnout, the New York State offers no forms of convenience voting for eligible voters. Due to the state’s populous background, it would be most beneficial to adopt vote-by-mail with permanent status. This method would unconventionally mobilize the citizens of the state. When citizens receive ballots at their homes, not only are they more likely to vote, they are also more likely to make educated decisions in an assumingly less stressful environment than a polling place. The flexibility, desired by the working class, is perhaps the most essential factor in this form of convenience voting. Receiving a ballot indicates that the eligible voter does not need to go out of her way and let elections interfere with her daily routine. This …show more content…

Firstly, while citizens have more time to make educated electoral decisions, they are also more likely to discuss it with their family members. It is widely known that women were not represented in the elections even after the suffrage movement due to the heavy influence of male figures in their lives. Acknowledging that this no longer takes place on a large-scale, it is still very likely to influence young, illiterate, and disabled voters who may be manipulated. Secondly, with the permanent status, it would be immensely difficult to keep track of people’s addresses. In the case that one house receives the older tenants and the new tenants ballots, there is room for voter fraud. Thirdly, some argue that vote-by-mail takes the social experience, an essential participation motivator, away from elections. It challenges the way eligible voters view politics, and the relations between a nation-state and its citizens. Fourthly, some studies show that this convenience-voting method only influences turnout in infrequent voters, whereas frequent voters prefer conventional

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