Youth suffrage

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Youth suffrage is the right to vote for young people to vote. Iran had a voting age of 15; Brazil and Nicaragua have a voting age of 16; and Indonesia, East Timor, Sudan, and Seychelles have a voting age of 17[1].

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[edit] United States

In the United States, suffrage originally could not be denied on account of age only to those 21 years of age or older; this age is mentioned in the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The Twenty-sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, ratified on July 1, 1971, lowered that age to 18. The primary impetus for this change was the fact that young men were being drafted to fight in the Vietnam War before they were old enough to vote. There have been many proposals to lower the voting age even further. In 2004, California State Senator John Vasconcellos (D-Santa Clara) proposed a youth suffrage constitutional amendment called Training Wheels for Citizenship that would give 14-year-olds a quarter vote, 16-year-olds a half vote, and 17-year-olds a full vote[2].

[edit] Venezuela

A proposal to lower the voting age from 18 to 16 was defeated in the Venezuelan constitutional referendum, 2007.

[edit] Arguments for and against youth suffrage

[edit] Arguments for

  • 16- and 17-year-olds are old enough to pay income taxes; therefore, denying them the right to vote is taxation without representation[3].
  • 16-year-olds are legally permitted to have sex[4] or drive a car, which are more dangerous and difficult than voting.[3]
  • Voter turnout among youth will improve if young people get in the habit of voting before they reach 18 and go to colleges far away from their state of residency, like it did in Germany when some states lowered their voting age for municipal elections[5].

[edit] Arguments against

  • Young people have not supported themselves and do not have sufficient understanding of the realities of life to participate in voting[6].
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  • Young people are too apathetic to vote anyway, even when they're old enough to.

[edit] External links

[edit] References