Home Adulting 12 Reasons I’m Not Voting In The 2020 Presidential Election

12 Reasons I’m Not Voting In The 2020 Presidential Election

election

I used to be that person who thought it was my civic duty to vote in every election, mainly out of the belief that it was up to the “decent” people to reduce the harm to specific groups by voting for the “lesser of two evils.”

And then I grew the f*ck up. Here are 12 reasons why I won’t be voting in the 2020 election:

1. Black Lives Matter is a  “controversial statement.”

Black lives don’t matter more than others. They don’t matter solely. They just matter, period. Even self-proclaimed liberals rebut this phrase with a “but,” as if they are still convinced that white people are oppressed. 

I can’t in good faith vote for anyone who can’t bring themselves to agree that my life matters without adding a qualifying statement. 

2. The issues that are most important to me are “hot button” issues to the candidates.

If you visit Biden’s campaign website and scroll down to the “issues” section, you won’t find a subsection on civil rights or criminal justice reform. That’s ironic, considering the state of America right now.

We’ve had months-long protests for justice for George Floyd, Ahmad Arbery, Breonna Taylor, and Jacob Blake. But candidates in this election cycle have nothing to say about their plans (or lack thereof) for racial justice in America. 

3. We need a paradigm shift, and everyone who ran for President was “50 shades of moderate.”

While millennials and Gen Zers have latched on to progressive Democrats like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Bernie Sanders, the party itself has largely rejected its far left faction, which tells me that they aren’t willing to adjust to younger folks’ needs. They’re looking for the Baby Boomer vote. 

4. Our 2020 candidates have a history of purposefully harming the Black community.

Biden’s 1994 crime bill, which included the 3-strikes provision and expanded the death penalty to include 60 more crimes, aided the mass incarceration of Black men. And during Harris’ tenure as California state attorney general, she refused to support a bill mandating special investigations for police shootings and cut civil rights groups out of the investigations. Also, as San Francisco District Attorney, she prosecuted parents whose children skipped school, disproportionately targeting the Black community.

5. We need to prioritize people over profit, but the makeup of America doesn’t allow for that. 

America’s capitalist foundation of profit and greed above humanity is so ingrained that it would probably take overthrowing the government – or even an asteroid – to re-model it.

6. Candidates still think that they can “fix it from within.”

For instance, Harris’ history as attorney general has proven that she’s part of the problem. And while at one point the idea of “fixing the system from within” would have been a noble self-sacrifice, we have learned a thousand times over that this simply doesn’t work. We can throw this idea out, along with “trickle down economics” and cheese-wiz.

7. We have a two-party system where the politicians (not the people) choose the candidates.

Which is why our parties put all of their resources and energy behind the candidate of their choosing and leave everyone else out in the cold, regardless of the candidates’ ideologies or popularity with voters. 

 8. The electoral system is trash.

Maybe in eighteen-hundred-nothing, it made sense to use an electoral college because we didn’t have the means to accurately collect and count individual votes, but in 2020, we do.

9. The system purposefully muzzles its Progressives. 

This explains why Ocasio-Cortez only had 60 seconds to speak at the DNC, regardless of her popularity with Millennial voters. And Millennials could potentially make up the largest voting block. 

10. Voting for the “lesser of two evils,” isn’t voting, it’s coercion.

Shit with a cherry on top is still shit. 

11. Many of the people in office today were in office 30 years ago.

And the fact that they’re still “fighting for the same things” doesn’t mean that they are “consistent,” it means they aren’t accomplishing anything. Take a shit, or get off the pot. 

12. Corporations buy seats in congress. 

We all know that major corporations throw tons of money into political campaigns in exchange for tax cuts. Why do we continue to turn a blind eye on this corruption and participate in a system that allows it?

Right now, our Congress members are on vacation while most of us worry over how we’ll pay our bills without a second round of stimulus checks or an extension of re-employment benefits. No matter which political party you look at, the only thing on politicians’ minds is winning this year’s election, lining their own pockets, and decorating their homes with $31,000 dining room sets on the taxpayers’ dime. Politicians don’t care about doing the right thing and taking care of their constituents….because that would be “socialism.”

Featured Photo by Unseen Histories on Unsplash.

6 COMMENTS

  1. Yes. But not to vote is voting fir the wrong side.,if you choise not to vote, you choose not to complain or have a word as what is going on in the country

  2. Yes. But not to vote is voting fir the wrong side.,if you choise not to vote, you choose not to complain or have a word as what is going on in the country

    • That’s not even true. Not voting doesn’t mean you must completely resign your ideaology/beliefs, that’s ridiculous. Whether or not you vote, you will always have a say in what goes on in this country. The Dems and Reps are two sides of the same coin. They’re both wrong, and they have been for a long time, which is why we’re here in the first place. If we want meaningful change to take place, we’re going to have to do way more than vote.

      • Right on Cate!! Agree 110% I do not vote and haven’t since 2015, but I pass along a lot of solid info to over a 100 people to give a heads up to those who do.

  3. So good to hear the views of a young person on the election, great work Ashleigh, keep speaking out for what you believe in.

  4. I agree with a lot of comments you have made about the election I can’t figure out why we have a 77 year old Democratic hopefull we have nobody younger to challenge Trump I still voting to many people died for me to have the opportunity to exercise my right as a united states citizen no matter how bad politics is right now

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