You're viewing old version number 3. - Current version

2 min

More thoughts about Toledo voter turnout - April 2014

"Give me a national holiday for election day ..."

Does that mean a day off from work? If so, would that be a holiday only on presidential elections or every November general election? If the latter, then the 75 percent of the eligible voting public who does not vote would love the holiday idea.

Is the goal of the election day holiday to make it easier for hard-core voters to vote or to increase voter turnout?

What about other elections that occur in March, May, and September? Are those holidays too?

At least locally, voter turnout appeared to be higher in the past when it was "harder" to vote. In olden days, most people actually had to vote on election day.

Toledo's most recent primary for mayor and city council at-large was held in September 2013, and Toledo's voter turnout was only around 15 percent. That includes all types of voting and not just what occurs on election day.

If the goal of an election day holiday is to increase voter turnout, then we need local election day holidays for primaries too. 15 percent??

If you believe that voting is important, then locally, I would consider the election year that involves choosing a mayor and the six city council at-large seats to be Toledo's most important election. Yet Toledo's voter turnout for the November 2013 election was only 25 percent.

(culling more info from old posts)

Both losers in the 2005 and 2009 Toledo mayoral elections had more votes than the winner in the 2013 election.

2005:
Carty Finkbeiner 47,351 61%
Jack Ford 29,169 38%
76,520
-
2009:
Mike Bell35,11852%
Keith Wilkowski31,98748%
67,105
-
2013: unofficial
Mike Collins28,00256.5%
Mike Bell21,53643.5%
-49,538

In 2013, nearly 27,000 fewer votes were cast for the Toledo mayor's race compared to 2005. That seems like a dramatic drop-off for only eight years.

In the November 1993 Toledo mayoral election, Carty Finkbeiner defeated Mike Ferner by 672 votes. In that election, 92,470 votes were cast.

In the November 2013 Toledo mayoral election, 49,538 votes were cast. That seems like a dramatic drop-off in only 20 years.

Toledo's population in 1990 was 332,943.
Toledo's population in 2010 was 287,208.

Obviously, the declining population explains some or much of the decline in voter turnout, but relatively speaking, the vote count in 2013 seems significantly lower compared to 1993.

I don't know how an election day holiday changes the growing apathy toward local politics. But a part of me sees no problem with voter apathy.

2007 post that includes thoughts from 2005:
Theory: The non-voters are happier than the voters

Obviously, voting is not the only way to help a city. In fact, voting may be the least that someone can do.

#toledo - #politics

From JR's : articles
439 words - 2709 chars - 2 min read
created on
updated on - #
source - versions

Related articles
Toledo water blade opinion august 2014 - Aug 11, 2014
Tt post aug 5 2015 - Aug 05, 2015
Toledo's negative momentum - December 2015 - Dec 08, 2015
Feb 23, 2017 comment that i did not post to tt - Feb 23, 2017
2009 Toledo Elections - Oct 09, 2013
more >>



A     A     A     A     A

© 2013-2017 JotHut - Online notebook

current date: May 18, 2024 - 8:35 a.m. EDT