There was an interesting thing during voting, someone noticed their ballot stuck on the urn slit, and asked for help.
They brought this “official” ballot pusher, it was like a long ruler they used to unclog the box. It got me thinking on how archaic is this method, and on the many ways that this can go wrong.
I found that Canada did some study on internet voting, but things are very slow. https://www.canada.ca/en/democratic-institutions/services/reports/online-voting-path-forward-federal-elections.html
News about voting technologies always bring up Estonia as a modern voting system. But it seems that other countries have been successful with electronic or internet voting for around 20 years too.
Another thing I saw is that some of those countries have the voting age down to 16 years. That makes sense to me, they have to live with those decisions longer than I. They can drive and join the army (with parents consent), voting should be added to their rights.
I could not find any organization in Canada taking care of those. And from what I read in the FairVote Canada website, it seems to cover only PR.
I ask it here because I am not sure where to ask, since those seem to make elections “fairer”.
tl;dr;
Does Fairvote Canada only covers PR? Do they have any sister organization that would cover:
- Electronic/internet voting?
- lowering the voting age?
Thank you in advance.
Thank you so much, those information and links are great.
Focusing on PR makes sense, a lot of those countries already had some sort of PR going on when they implemented electronic ballot or internet voting, it also facilitated referendums a lot. The same goes with the voting age, some implemented as soon as they became a democracy, others took a bit longer.
I will look into getting involved and volunteering. Thank you.