by Pa Rock
Citizen Journalist
The government of the United Kingdom (England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland) announced this week that it will lower the voting age to sixteen by the time of the next general election which will be held on or before August 15, 2029. The change in the minimum voting age will be for all elections. Scotland and Wales already have an established minimum voting age of sixteen for their devolved country and council elections. The new measure will standardize the minimum voting age requirement in each of the four countries of the UK and spread it to all elections.
There is no established voting age for the European Union, and member nations are free to set their own voting requirements. Some of those voting age requirements currently are: age 16 in Germany, Austria, and Malta; age 17 in Greece; and, age 18 in the remaining member nations of the EU, with citizens of Belgium being allowed to vote at 16 in European elections.
The times appear to be changing. Young people in Australia are already clamoring for the 16-year-old vote. Can the US be far behind?
When I was growing up in rural America in the 1950's and 60's, the minimum voting age was twenty-one, but there was always talk of lowering it to eighteen. That hadn't happened by the time my eighteenth birthday came and went in the spring of 1966.
There was a presidential election in 1968, Nixon versus Humphrey, in which I was only twenty and not old enough to vote, and I resented that bitterly - as did many young people of the time. That was a time of social and political upheaval, and many protests were occurring, protests that often featured young people expressing strong opinions about things like the on-going Vietnam War, the draft, segregation, poverty, gay rights, free love, and even the voting age.
Congress passed a resolution to amend the US Constitution and lower the voting age in the US to eighteen on March 23, 1971, my 23rd birthday, and a few months later the states ratified the Amendment. I cast my first presidential vote in November of 1972 - for George McGovern - at the age of twenty-four, along with a sea of newly enfranchised Americans, some as young as eighteen.
Back in 1968 when the protests were still going strong, some friends and I went to the drive-in one evening and watched a new movie called "Wild in the Streets" which went on to become a cult classic. The movie was so good that we went back to see it again a few nights later, and today I still have a copy of "Wild in the Streets" on DVD.
The main character in the movie is Max Frost, a young radical who is busy making a bomb in his parents' basement, a bomb which he uses to blow up his father's new car before leaving home for good and later emerging as a rock star. Max has political aspirations and manages to get an LSD-dropping friend of his elected to Congress, and she introduces a resolution to lower the voting age to fourteen. After pouring acid (LSD) into the water supply of Washington, DC, they lead each drugged out congressman into the Capitol and help them to vote for the proposed change to the Constitution. When 14-year-olds have the right to vote, Max gets himself elected President, but he is soon beset by angry 10-year-olds who feel they should be running things.
It's a real family-friendly film with lots to ponder!
I'm not sure how I feel about 16-year-olds voting, so I think I will just sit down and shut up and let the young people chart their own future - and I wish Nancy Pelosi, Chuckles Schumer and Grassley, and Donald John Trump would all do the same!
Peace out!