Kirsten Bound
Demos Associate
Kirsten Bound was a senior researcher at Demos until 2008. Her work at Demos focused on democracy and emerging science and innovation in India and Brazil. She is author of India: the uneven innovator and Brazil: the natural knowledge economy and co-author with Paul Skidmore of the Everyday Democracy Index.
We all know political disengagement is a hard nut to crack. I mean what do you appeal to? People's intrinsic sense of civic duty? Their desire to take control of their own lives? All well and good, but we’ve been there and tried that. How about appealing to love for money and the quest for a celebrity lifestyle? In
Democrat, Mark Osterloh, who is behind the initiative: the Arizona Voter Reward Act, is promoting it with the slogan, “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? Vote!” He collected 185,902 signatures of registered voters, far more than the 122,612 required to certify the incentive for the ballot this autumn.
Does this kind of lotto-ocracy degrade the voting process? Maybe. Is it legal to reward people financially for voting? (I’ll give you a clue – no.)
It is definitely a gimmick, but what's wrong with gimmicks if they find a way to spark an everyday interest in politics? Let us know what you think. I'll send the tenth person to comment a cheque for a fiver. (terms and conditions apply)
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James Harkin wrote a good peice on incentives in the Guardian a couple of weeks ago - have a read here...