Compulsory voting for Malaysia
Malaysian Politics
Compulsory voting for Malaysia
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Compulsory voting for Malaysia
By Dr Chen Man Hin, DAP life adviser
COMPULSORY VOTING IS BETTER WAY TO ENSURE HIGH TURN OUT OF VOTERS, AND ENSURE THAT ALL ELIGIBLE VOTERS ARE ENFRANCHISED
It was revealed by the Election Commission Deputy Chairman that out of 16 million people eligible to vote, only 11 million have been registered to vote. It meant that 5 million eligible voters were not registered. This is most unsatisfactory as it means that one third of eligible voters have been denied of the right to vote because of a small technicality – failure to be registered as a voter.
It is also most unfair as those unregistered are composed of the poorer deprived section of the community, who need to have their voices heard and their problems aired and their grievances attended to in parliament or the state assemblies.
REGISTRATION OF VOTERS
The registration of voters has prove to be a tiresome and unproductive method of registration of voters. There is too much paper work, and very inconvenient for the people, who have to travel long distances to registration centres. This is most unfair. There is a better system to ensure all eligible voters are properly registered and entitled to vote.
Compulsory voting for Malaysia
Malaysia should follow the example of some 38 countries who practice compulsory voting, and achieve a high percentage of voting. Australia which practices compulsory voting records 98% of voters turning out to vote. In Europe, Italy and France have compulsory voting. In Asean, Singapore, Thailand and Philippines have compulsory voting.
It is time for Malaysia to follow suit by abandoning the present system, and save much money and labor. The compulsory system allow for automatic registration of those eligible to vote. The present arduous procedure of registration at a specified centre should be scrapped.
With compulsory voting, the main advantage is that all eligible voters can exercise their voting rights and have their say in the running of the government and demand their rights. This is democracy, as all strata of society can exercise their right to vote.
Malaysian Maverick: Mahathir Mohamad in Turbulent Times
by Barry Wain
Mahathir Mohamad turned Malaysia into one of the developing worlds most successful economies. He adopted pragmatic economic policies alongside repressive political measures and showed that Islam was compatible with representative government and modernization.
He emerged as a Third World champion and Islamic spokesman by standing up to the West.
About the Author
BARRY WAIN, a former editor of the Asian Wall Street Journal, is Writer-in-Residence at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore. An Australian journalist who has lived in Asia for 37 years, he is author of The Refused, an account of the refugee outflow from Indochina after the Vietnam War.
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