Sy Borg wrote: ↑October 8th, 2022, 2:14 am
Tommo wrote: ↑October 7th, 2022, 8:47 pm
Was it Plato who identified the one foreseeable problem with democracy: that anyone could become a politician.
He suggested, I think, to restrict the position of politician to philosophers.
Not sure how that would work. Apply to the general public for preselection? Pass an exam? Divulge IQ? A spread of all 73 gender identities - except males?
Then again, isn’t everyone a philosopher?
I'd settle for electors proving that they know the different functions of different levels of government. Not in detail, just to have some semblance of an idea to demonstrate that they can make at least a somewhat informed vote.
Per the US Constitution as originally written the qualifications for voting for federal offices was left entirely to the States, with voters having the same "qualifications requisite for electors of the most numerous branch of the state legislature." (Article I). The 15th Amendment (1870) prohibited states from denying anyone the right to vote on account of race, and the 19th Amendment (1920) prohibited them from denying the vote based on sex. In addition, the 14th Amendment (1869) prohibited the States from denying anyone within its jurisdiction "equal protection of the law." The Supreme Court has held that Amendment to prohibit States from requiring payment of a poll tax in order to vote, or requiring property ownership, or imposing lengthy residency requirements.
Apart from those restrictions the States are still free to decide who is qualified to vote. Nothing in the Constitution or subsequent Court rulings prevents a State from denying the vote on grounds of ignorance. Indeed, in the poll tax case (Harper v. Virginia Board of Elections, 1966), the Court said, "wealth, like race, creed, or color is not germane to one’s ability to participate intelligently in the electoral process."
So, presumably, the States remain free to determine who has the "ability to participate intelligently in the electoral process."
The problem of voter ignorance has been long lamented and debated in the poli sci literature. One journal to which I subscribed for several years devoted 2 years' of quarterly issues to that subject. Perhaps the most widely favored solution is requiring all would-be voters to pass the same "Citizenship Qualification Test" currently required of immigrants applying for US citizenship.