The Controversy Of Lowering The Voting Age

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It’s November, the election to determine the next U.S president has begun, the voting polls are open and several people are present. Among then are a group of 16 year olds, who have recently been granted the right to vote. As the group walks over to cast their ballot, they discuss how they will vote by choosing which candidate they think looks the best. The group has no idea what each candidates ideas are, so how can they be given the right to vote uneducated?
Recently as other nations have begun lowering the voting age, some people have started wondering whether it’s time to give our young people the right to vote. For example, in the vote to have Scotland leave the U.K., 16 year olds were at the voting polls too. Since politicians and other political groups have been pushing lowering the voting age recently, it’s time to think about if we should really give teenagers the vote. By keeping the voting age at 18 it ensures that our nation's young people will make wise and educated ballots.
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“It's hard to tell whether one person is more "mature" than the other -- we all mature at different paces, mentally, emotionally and culturally. But intuitively, it's impossible for the government to evaluate every citizen's common sense.” (Lowering the Voting Age: Enshrining Rights Without Responsibilities…..) There is no defined age when a person matures and starts developing better decision making skills. By keeping the voting age, every young voter will most likely have matured