Monday, November 3, 2014

Mandatory voting would give us much better government

Leaves turning in Hackensack's quiet Fairmount section, where several streets are named after trees. Residents vote at the Fairmount Elementary School on Grand Avenue.


By VICTOR E. SASSON
EDITOR

One of the key reasons Governor Christie won a second term a year ago was low voter turnout, setting a dubious record for a governor's race in New Jersey.

Of course, the other was the media, which failed to uncover the role of key Christie aides in the George Washington Bridge lane closures two months before the election. 

Fewer than 39.6 percent of registered voters cast ballots last November, and a few weeks earlier, only 24.5 percent -- one in four -- voted in the special U.S. Senate election.

National news

On Page 1 today, The Record reports get-out-the-vote drives in North Carolina and other states, but where is the local version of that story?

As usual, the lazy local assignment editors can't wait until Tuesday's election is over so they can go back to sleep.

As for Editor Martin Gottlieb, a carpetbagger from Manhattan, he could care less about what happens in New Jersey, as his front pages clearly show.

Today, the Ebola outbreak in West Africa again leads the paper, and there is a takeout on sports betting in Delaware (A-1).

The front-page story on chronically absent students continues the paper's practice of reporting more on schools in Paterson than in Hackensack (A-1).

Voting as duty

Voter turnout in Hackensack is even lower than in the state overall.

In May 2013, when a reform City Council slate triumphed, only 3,513 people or 17.2 percent of registered voters cast ballots.

Turnout in the April 2013 school board election was even lower.

Mandatory voting is the only solution, with fines or other penalties for those who don't cast ballots.

Politics wouldn't have as much influence, and candidates who use inaccurate attack ads wouldn't be as effective.

We might even be able to get rid of mean-spirited political hacks like Christie and Rep. Scott Garrett, the Tea Party Republican from Wantage who has managed to stay in office for close to 12 years.

On Tuesday, voters in the 5th Congressional District, which runs from the Delaware to the Hudson and includes Bergen County, have a chance to deny Garrett a seventh term.


4 comments:

  1. So an uninformed electorate voting out of spite would create better government?

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  2. Why spite? They're uninformed by the media now, but the sheer numbers would cancel out all the B.S. and attack ads, and I hope, people would vote on the basis of issues.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Why would they educate themselves on the issues

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  4. They might take a look at the morons running things now and vote for someone better, especially if they got the help of the media to expose what lousy government we have.

    ReplyDelete

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