In 2016, estimates from the U.S. Elections Project showed that nearly 43 percent of eligible voters failed to fill out a ballot for the presidential election. According to Pew Research, tens of millions of registered voters did so because of a “dislike of the candidates or campaign issues." Shockingly, this means that in 2016, the number of people who were eligible to vote and chose not to greatly outnumbered who voted for Clinton, Trump, or a third-party candidate.

Curious about this, we turned to Reddit to find out WHY people were so quick to willfully toss out their voting power.

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Check out the answers we found below.

"I wasn't scared my brown or LBGTQ country folk would actually be fucked over. I assumed it was all his [Trump's] ploy to get the people who voted Bush and Reagan in, to vote him in... Make the white people scared and make sure they don't trust the Dems. or people of colour or alternative life choice. I'm from L.A.; we grow up mixed and if your a decent human you respect everyone or move back to whatever hate hole you come from." - Sgrociopath

"I moved from a strong blue state to a strong blue state on November 7, 2016, which was too late to register to vote in this year's election(and I re-checked multiple times to make sure that was the case)." -lovethenewname

"Didn't pay enough attention when they first started running and by the time I was looking, everyon was so polarized biased I didn't wanna dig through the bullshit to make an educated opinion." -AndeeRin1031

"Didn't find a candidate I could support. The only good thing anyone else had going for them was "eh at least it's not Hillary" and when that's your only good trait you're not worth my support." - egnards

"Because I didn't want to pledge my allegiance to a candidate and then have to defend them for their choices. I want to complain about the president because a group of yes men ultimately get you sent to a psych ward." -buk_ow_ski

"I didn't have a permanent address and wasn't sure how to even anything." -weinerpug

"I live in a completely red state and didn't give myself enough time. I left an hour and a half early for work, sat in line for 45 minutes, realized I wasn't going to make it and said "fuck it" and left." -Eensquatch

"I refused to vote (my first election that I did not) simply because both candidates were disgusting and there was simply no choice I could make."-ultimatemayerfan

"I didn't vote despite voting in the primaries. The reason why was aside from the fake propaganda essentially the democratic party really did know who they wanted and had enacted things to make primarying difficult in order to support Clinton. Dropping people from registries, cutting down primary locations, making it so you had to be registered so many months in advance Clinton was the only option. If your party deliberately makes it hard to vote you can't turn around a few months later and tell everyone "Okay now get out and vote!"

Also the narrative against Sanders had been "1 man can't change things that much". But then when it was Clinton against Trump the narrative was "1 man will ruin everything". You don't get to have it both ways.

I was going to be a first-time voter but then I was basically told "we don't want you to vote unless it's who we tell you"

I don't regret it. Especially since my state is so red (Utah) even had I voted for Clinton I would have just been another vote that didn't win her the election." -collin3000

"My ballot didn't come in the mail." -NutellaGood