Pressure mounts on Andy Burnham to back compulsory voting | Politics | News


Pressure is mounting on Andy Burnham to introduce compulsory voting so Britons will face fines if they fail to take part in an election. The IPPR think tank โ€“ famed for its influence on Labour policy โ€“ wants all eligible UK residents to face a ยฃ10 fine if they fail to vote.

There is alarm that younger voters โ€“ who are much more likely than older voters to support Left-wing parties โ€“ are radically less likely to cast a vote. Its analysis found at the last election only 56% of 18-24-year-olds voted, compared to 81% aged 61-plus.

And while only six out of 10 people with the least educational qualifications voted in 2024, eight out of 10 with a university education cast a vote. The IPPR report comes on the heels of a report in May from Labour Together, now known as ThinkLabour, which also called for compulsory voting.

Shadow Communities Secretary Sir James Cleverly said: โ€œUnder these bizarre plans, sixteen-year-olds will be allowed to vote in an election but not stand as candidates. They will be able to vote, but not buy a lottery ticket, consume alcohol, marry, or go to war. Andy Burnham must rule out adopting these policies and urge Labour to reverse its wrongheaded plans for votes at 16.โ€

However, the IPPR states: โ€œThe minimum responsibility of a democratic citizen is to participate in elections.โ€

It claims low voting rates means politics is โ€œskewedโ€ towards the โ€œinterests of older, wealthier, white votersโ€.

Pushing for Britain to follow Australiaโ€™s example by introducing compulsory voting, it claims: โ€œTurnout in Australian elections has fallen below 90% only once since the introduction of compulsory voting in 1924, with similar results in Belgium, Singapore and Chile. Compulsory voting radically reduces turnout differentials between groups. When groups vote in greater numbers, politicians must take greater account of their interests.โ€

To make it easier to vote, the think tankโ€™s paper backs the โ€œintroduction of polling day bank holidaysโ€. It adds that a โ€œnone of the aboveโ€ option should be included on ballots so voters are not required to back any candidate.

In the 2024 election, just under six out of 10 eligible people took part and Labour won 412 of the 650 seats in Westminster with just 33.7% of the vote.

The IPPR paper warns: โ€œDeclining turnout, political inequality and a rising sense that voting doesnโ€™t matter are the surest signs of the fragmenting of the public, the weakening bonds of common citizenship.โ€

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