Recently
Liberal Premier Kathleen Wynne, Progressive Conservative interim
leader Vic Fedeli, NDP Leader Andrea Horwath, and Green Leader Mike
Schreiner recently gathered
at Ryerson University to discuss - not to debate - the need for
democratic renewal . Moderated by the Star’s Queen’s Park
columnist, Martin Regg Cohn the forum focused on the urgent need to
better engage young people.
In
the last two elections, barely half of Ontarians bothered to cast a
ballot — an embarrassing 48 per cent voted in 2011, and a
dispiriting 51 per cent turned out in 2014.
They
were the worst showings by civic no-shows in our democratic history.
And far worse turnouts than in any other provincial or federal
election ever.
The
Green’s Schreiner told more than 300 people at the George Vari
Engineering and Computing Centre
“Who
do we blame for disengagement? I think the media, politicians, and
the way we conduct politics has to share in some of the blame,”.“I
am deeply concerned about our civil discourse in terms of how we
refer to voters. Think about some of the media tropes that are out
there,” “We talk about ‘taxpayers’ a lot as if we’re only
‘taxpayers,’ or we talk as if voters are there to harvest votes,
or that we’re consumers of government services, rather than
actually talking about people as citizens.” interim leader Vic
Fedeli said it’s no wonder young people don’t vote because the
electoral process is so antiquated.
Progressive
Conservative interim leader Vic Fedeli said it’s no wonder young
people don’t vote because the electoral process is so antiquated.
“You
have to get to a voting place. You’re either going to take transit
or drive a car and park or get there somehow, walk. You’re going to
go to a building you’ve probably never been to before. You’re
going to get in a line with people you’ve never met before — a
long line in some cases — you’re going to finally get up there,
bring out paper ID and register,” he said. “You’re going to be
handed a ballot. You’ll get in a cardboard box and there’s a
pencil and you’re going to fill out your ballot and hand it to
somebody who is going to put it in another box,” “The way you
actually work is not reflected in the way our government system has
you voting. You’re not reflected in that. You work with tablets and
electronic voting. The way you work is completely different than the
way our system is set up.”
An
aside here.... as I have said on these pages before I am no great fan
of the 'Conservative' mindset, at least as it currently exists in
both Federal and Ontario politics. I am however somewhat disappointed
that Mr Fedeli is only 'interim leader' for he seems to be the only
one of those currently involved in the conservative leadership
fiasco with the experience and skills to actually move the party
forward in a positive way. Perhaps the current total cfk will bring
about a positive change eventually but I an not holding my breath!
Moving
on......
Wagging
our fingers won’t help. Making people feel guilty won’t make
them vote.
What will it take
to revive the democratic impulse at a time when the pulse is
especially weak? The polling by Campaign Research provides
interesting clues:- The biggest
single reason people don’t vote — cited by more than one-third
of all Ontarians — is they believe they can’t, because they are
somehow not registered. This finding cries out for targeted
information from the media, electoral authorities, political
parties, and activist groups.
- Mandatory
voting is the law in Australia, but remains a long shot here —
Ontarians are evenly split on fines for those who don’t cast
ballots. Nearly two-thirds of those born outside Canada support
compulsory voting, their sense of civic duty and democratic
engagement could be harnessed with greater outreach.
- Better campaign platforms and information are also the top reasons cited by voters for what would make them more likely to participate. Bottom of the list: electoral reform, cited by only 1 per cent in the survey.
My own
thoughts on this as I eye up the choices that will soon be presented
to us here in Ontario is that perhaps if we had a better selection of
both candidates and party platforms (not that you can believe
anything they say during an election period) then perhaps more folks
would bother to make a choice! As always the delema of whether to vote
for the individual, the party they run under or the platform that
party presents further adds to the difficulty, often leading to the
wish for a 'Non of the above' choice at the ballot box. Certainly
making sure our youth and more recent citizens are aware of their
voting rights and how to register and vote as well as a much simpler
and less archaic system would also go a long way to improve the
turnout.
2 comments:
I caught part of the discussion, Rural, and I thought Horwath (who I have no respect for) made a good point when she said this confusion over whether one is registered to vote could be reduced if we went back to enumerating voters, a process that apparently ceased in 1997.
I have to say that Regg Cohn's article really hit me and has made me rethink a strategy I was leaning toward for the next election: declining my ballot, something I have never done in my life. Like you, I am profoundly disappointed in the quality of our choices. At this point, all I know is that I will not be voting Liberal, thanks to Wynne's betrayal of all Ontarians by selling off 60% of Hydro One.
As well, Rick Salutin had a very interesting piece on this in Friday's Star:
https://www.thestar.com/opinion/star-columnists/2018/03/01/selling-hydro-was-kathleen-wynnes-inextinguishable-sin.html
I agree that selling off Hydro One was totally wrong, Lorne. As for who to vote for, or if to vote at all, the jury is still out at this end!!
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