Truro News

All-time low

‘Disillusio­nment is a factor’

- BY BRETT BUNDALE THE CANADIAN PRESS

Just half of eligible voters cast ballots.

Voter turnout in Nova Scotia slumped to an all-time low in Tuesday’s provincial election, with just over half of eligible voters casting ballots.

Fewer than 54 per cent of eligible voters cast ballots, a drop from the 2013 voter turnout of slightly more than 58 per cent.

Premier Stephen McNeil called it “alarming,” and vowed to take a “hard look” at the issue.

“The trend is going in the wrong direction and last night’s drop was substantia­l in my view,” he told reporters in Halifax Wednesday. “There needs to be a hard look at what can we do to try to help improve participat­ion.”

Of the 748,633 registered electors in the province, only 400,898 cast a ballot in a race that saw McNeil win a second consecutiv­e majority government.

The urban riding of Halifax Citadel-Sable Island recorded one of the lowest voter turnouts on record, with just over 40 per cent of electors registerin­g a vote.

Cape Breton-Richmond had the biggest turnout - nearly 70 per cent.

Elections Nova Scotia spokesman Andy LeBlanc says the low turnout was a disappoint­ing departure from the strong early voting trend, in which

112,900 voters cast their ballots at advanced polls.

“We had a very strong showing, probably the highest turnout, when it comes to early voting,” he said. “But once we finished all the counting after yesterday we see that it was 53.55 per cent.”

LeBlanc said it’s the lowest voter turnout since at least 1960, and likely since 1867.

Yet the problem is not a lack of opportunit­y, he said.

“Without question in the last 30 or so days we’ve had more voting opportunit­ies available than ever before,” LeBlanc said. “We had people voting as early as May 1, less than 24 hours after the writ was issued.”

Voter turnout has steadily declined in Nova Scotia over the last several decades. In 1960, for example, 82 per cent of electors

voted, while nearly 70 per cent voted in 1998.

While the 2017 election, at 53.55 per cent, is the lowest on record, it’s difficult to say whether it’s a reflection of slumping civic engagement, an inability for political parties to galvanize the public, or a deeper reaction to the first-past-thepost voting system.

“We’re seeing a decline in traditiona­l or customary practices in some communitie­s,” political science professor Tom Urbaniak of Cape Breton University said in an interview. “In some rural communitie­s, we still see higher turnout as it’s part of the custom and accepted social responsibi­lity.”

“Disillusio­nment is a factor,” he said. “I would strongly recommend as a society we do some serious soul searching.”

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 ?? Lynn curwin/truro daily news ?? Fewer than 54 per cent of eligible voters cast ballots in Tuesday’s provincial election.
Lynn curwin/truro daily news Fewer than 54 per cent of eligible voters cast ballots in Tuesday’s provincial election.

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