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US government and civics
Course: US government and civics > Unit 7
Lesson 1: Why it matters- Sal Khan & John Dickerson: introduction
- Why study US history, government, and civics?
- Why do midterm congressional elections matter?
- Why does your vote matter?
- How does voter turnout in midterms compare to presidential elections?
- Does the president's party usually gain or lose seats at the midterm elections?
- Who is the Speaker of the House?
- Why is the Speaker of the House second in succession to the President?
- What was the Articles of Confederation?
- What was the Gilded Age?
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Why does your vote matter?
Voting matters because it can decide elections, influence lawmakers, and affect local laws and referendums. It's a way to voice opinions on future policies. Voting also connects us to our history and the global struggle for democratic rights. It's a civic duty we shouldn't take for granted.
Want to join the conversation?
- Why does voting matter?in a simple scietences(2 votes)
- Hi kendaeldaly89! Voting is important because it allows your interests to be represented in the law. The idea behind democracies, republics, and other representative forms of government is that the government ultimately gets its power from the people it governs. Because of this, the people should have a say in what the government does. As simply as possible, that's why voting is important - it's your way of telling the government what you want it to do.(1 vote)
- Why does voting matter?(1 vote)
Video transcript
- [Narrator] Why does your vote matter? - Your vote matters because,
in the most specific case, there might be a race where you live, for the House or the Senate
or even the presidency, where your vote really could
determine who the winner of that race is. We saw in the 2000
presidential election race, that basically the entire
presidency was determined by a difference of 537 votes in Florida. So that's a special case, but then also, there are reasons to vote that have nothing to do with
the people who are running for the national offices. There are lots of local
offices where laws are put on the book that really can
affect your day-to-day life. There's also referendums in
various states and localities. There are about 150-odd
referendas on everything from whether marijuana should be legalized to whether and how poor
people get medical coverage. Those are also on the
ballet in a lot of places. And also, when a vote
takes place for somebody who is being elected, it's
not just for the policies of the day, it's also for the
policies that may yet come. And if you have a view on the
way things should be handled, you should exercise your voice because it not only, if you are in a place where your vote is not
gonna matter in terms of directly electing the person you want, voting sends a message to those lawmakers. And it sends one of two kinds of messages. One, it says this number of people represents this viewpoint. And lawmakers should listen
to that kind of message from the voters. A lot of times, even if
they don't listen to it, well their opponents will
be able to raise it and say, Look, this many people believe
in this and you should. It is a fact that is then
used in public debate. And that fact can sometimes
be used to persuade people. Also, there's the case
that lawmakers get nervous. And they want to get re-elected. And if they see a lot
of people turning out on the other side, even
if it doesn't keep them from being elected, well, the next time, it might keep them from being elected. So they have to listen. Finally, it's the spiritual, kind of American civic religion,
which is America started on the idea that we could govern ourselves without resorting to fights. And we've been remarkably successful. Although American history is blotted, and it is broken in places,
but Americans have always transferred power
peacefully to each other, with the one great
exception of the Civil War. But the electoral system still survived, even through that most bloody battle. And so as Americans, by voting,
we are putting ourselves back in touch with this
great original experiment, that at its time was
unique in American history. And there are still people
all across the world who fight and die for the
simple ability to cast a vote so that their voice can be heard. And so not only to we have to keep faith with our own history,
but also with the world in which it is a human right
in some places to vote. And so we shouldn't take that
kind of thing for granted, if we want a world in which
human beings are allowed to voice their vote and have
that vote mean something in the way the laws are made that determine how their lives are lived.