Desired reaction to lower voting levels: "Oh no, we are losing legitimacy! Better go do what all those non-voters want!"
Actual reaction to lower voting levels: "Cool, I can disregard the interests of even more people! To the corruptionmobile!"
Unless lower voting levels overall also coincide with a higher level of people voting for candidates they actually want. It's not that I abstain completely from voting. I only vote on candidates that I would actually be ok with representing me. There just doesn't happen to be many of those. And if this isn't how voting is supposed to work, then the whole concept doesn't make a lick of sense to me at all.
I can't respect indignantly giving up any influence you have on that because your vote won't fix politics as a whole.
I think less about fixing politics as a whole, and more about how my vote actively perpetuates or worsens the bad stuff.
For example:
Wyoming recently made it a crime to collect evidence or data on the state of the environment. If you follow the link to see
who voted on this bill, you will find that Democrats voted for it, too. In fact, just as many republicans voted against it as did democrats. Exactly the same number, if you count the absence.
If I had voted on the following candidates, then I would bear responsibility for the passing of this bill.
Stan Blake (D)
Joann Dayton (D)
Ken Esquibel (D)
John Freeman (D)
Mary Throne (D)
And if I were to re-elect them after this purely for the sake of keeping a republican out of office, what message does it send? "I can continue to do stuff like this and get votes, and all I have to do is support a little more cultural diversity than the republicans!" That, to me, is actively perpetuating shitty politics. If we don't vote for these people, then the message it should send is that there's room for genuine alternatives to present themselves and have a chance at competing, although I understand the reality is that the D&R are very tightly allied in setting up as many barriers to entry for alternatives as possible.
But the worst barrier to alternatives is this good cop/bad cop routine that they have set up over the culture war. Voting habits are so tightly wound around this, that it
actively undermines any hope of genuine alternatives gaining any foothold. The only way it will ever happen is if we stop allowing this act to be the sole determiner of our voting decisions.