Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Voting in Israel: Easier and more Democratic than in the US

Ayman Odeh, the head of the joint Arab listing voting on Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Today, for the first time in over twenty years, I had the privilege of voting in an Israeli election. Though in many ways Israel still suffers from the bureaucracy of decades of socialist government, I have to say that voting here was SO MUCH EASIER and MORE DEMOCRATIC than voting in the US.

Heres why:

1) You don't have to register to vote. Instead you get a small note sent to you in the mail that tells you where your polling place is located.

2) If you lose the note, you just have to go to your polling place and show a picture ID (e.g. Identity Card and Passport).

3) There is a festive atmosphere at the polling stations. Lots of kids come with their parents. People are outside campaigning. You can take photographs and it is all very laid back.

4) There are no computers or hanging chads. Instead there are little notes with the names of the different political parties. You pick a note, put it in an envelope and then place that in the ballot box. There is no room for error here.

5) Most polling places are within a 10 minute walk of your home. There are 11,000 polling places in this tiny country. Pretty much every school and government preschool is a polling place.

6) ITS A NATIONAL HOLIDAY - You have no excuse not to vote.

7) If you happen to be registered at your parents and are a student in another city, you can ride the buses and trains FOR FREE on election day so that you have no excuse not to vote.

8) Instead of only two political parties to choose from, you have a plethora of parties from the far-right to the far-left, parties that are community based (Arab, Religious) and parties that are issue based (e.g. the Pirate Party). There is even a party that is running on a platform of free marijuana available for anyone who votes for them.

Now that's change that I can believe in!

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