Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

It’s your job, and your duty

- CHRISTINE MAHL Christine Mahl, a retired high school English and government teacher, is now a preschool owner, farmer, and concerned citizen. She lives in Peter Pender.

The midterm election is nearly here. Never in my lifetime have I seen such an important election to save our Madisonian democracy. As a U.S. government teacher, I’m scared that we as citizens are shirking on our duties of being informed and engaged. So I’m offering this primer. I hope it reminds you that you have a part in this government. You have a duty to perform.

■ Our government only survives with an informed electorate.

We have to pay attention to current events, political activity, issues, and candidates. We have to be discerning in our news intake. We have to recognize propaganda. We have to constantly think, “Who is telling us this informatio­n, and what do they want us to think/do/feel?” We have to engage our brains. We have to remember that it’s not always about me but about us, and we need to think from not only our perspectiv­e but from others’ perspectiv­es.

■ Government is a social contract, not a business.

Government is not meant to make a profit. It is not meant to squirrel away money. It’s not meant to squander it, either. Government officials must think of all their citizens, not only their party. They must allocate tax revenue to use for the best of society, not for the most privileged or the most powerful. Creating a surplus from federal funds meant to improve lives of all citizens during a pandemic and then handing it to the richest citizens isn’t good governance. It doesn’t benefit the majority or the most in need.

We have to think of each other, not just those who benefit us financiall­y or politicall­y. We must remember that the opposite of governance is anarchy.

Our elected officials must earn our votes. They must be accountabl­e to all citizens, not just their parties.

Celebrity does not equate to good candidacy. Just because you recognize a candidate does not qualify him/her as deserving. We must listen to his/ her words, actions, history. We need to elect citizens who live among us and interact with us.

We must elect officials who are concerned with the issues of the majority of our citizens, not just the most powerful and wealthiest, the lobbyists with the most influence. We must pay attention to the words and actions of candidates, not just the designated letter behind their names.

Who will represent us the best? Who has spent the most time among the citizens of the state? Who seems the most engaged with issues which impact our daily lives? Whose ads seem the most genuine, positive, issue-oriented? Campaignin­g for education which impacts all our students and then advocating vouchers which benefit 8 percent of the students in the state isn’t best representi­ng the citizens of one’s district.

Not living in the state in which you’re campaignin­g and holding no public appearance­s or town hall meetings in the years of your term does not best benefit constituen­ts. It benefits you. Not showing up for a sponsored debate in the state is lazy. It’s entitled. It doesn’t speak well for us, the voters, who let a candidate get by with such action.

We should demand accountabi­lity. We should demand a platform. We should demand and pay attention to debate. We need to pay attention to words and actions of our elected officials. We need to vote for people who represent all of us.

We are a democracy.

It’s been said on some media that we are a constituti­onal republic as a rebuke when someone states that we are a democracy. These terms are not mutually exclusive. A constituti­onal republic is a type of democracy, which we also are.

A democratic government relies on its citizens to dictate policy through elections. We must be an informed electorate. We must recognize these terms and the fact that we are being manipulate­d by people trying to divide us with misinforma­tion according to these terms.

■ One of the tenets of our democracy is egalitaria­nism: One person, one vote.

In order for our government to function effectivel­y, we must allow every citizen to vote. We must make it easy to vote. Everyone’s vote must count equally. Manipulati­ng the vote is un-American; laws which limit voting in minority areas are un-American. The current Arkansas Issue No. 2 limiting the access to citizens’ initiative­s on the ballot is essentiall­y un-American. In voting for it, we are ceding our power as citizens.

■ Another tenet of our democracy is Majority Rule.

The opinions of the majority should dictate the law. Gerrymande­ring congressio­nal districts to limit minority votes is un-American. Using the filibuster to limit the proposal of laws that the majority of the country wants enacted is un-American. Holding open judicial seats until one’s party can control appointmen­ts is un-American.

The Hastert Rule in Congress of not proposing laws unless the majority of the majority will vote for them led to not proposing law unless the president will sign it. Both ideas go against the American ideal that each branch of government is equal and independen­t, and that the Founders created a system of checks and balances in our government so that no one branch gained an undue amount of power over another.

Our ballot Issue No. 1, which would give the Legislatur­e the ability to call itself into session, goes against this tenet. We need to vote for leaders who are concerned with the majority of the citizenry, not leaders who have tried to manipulate the system to gain power.

No democracy can exist without an informed electorate, said Thomas Jefferson. The less we understand about our government, the more power we cede to those intent on steering us away from a democracy. We have a job to do. Use your power to vote accordingl­y.

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