The McGill Daily

Young Voters

Make voting accessible to youth: Vote on Campus

- Disha Garg Copy Editor

With the Canadian Federal Election soon approachin­g – the Liberals having called a snap election for September 20 – people across the country are preparing to vote in this unique election, the outcome of which could have drastic impacts for Canada’s future.

This year, 40 per cent of all eligible voters in Canada are Gen-Z and Millennial­s; and yet, no efforts have been made to ensure that voting is accessible to one of the largest voting groups. Elections Canada recently announced that it will not be making available the Vote on Campus Program, which in the past has dramatical­ly propelled voter turnout among students and youth. They cited “student presence on campus [being] uncertain because of the pandemic” and having “no clear fixed election date” as justificat­ion to cancel the program.

Students and student organizati­ons are voicing their concerns about the i mpacts of this decision on their ability to vote – and consequent­ly, voter turnout. Camellia Wong, the communicat­ions director of Future Majority, a non-profit organizati­on educating and empowering young Canadians to vote, spoke on behalf of Millenials and Gen-Z’s who feel that their vote is being devalued: “We see this cancellati­on as damaging to our democracy.” In a reader’s letter to the Toronto Star, Diane Letsche stated that in not i mplementin­g the Vote on Campus Program, Elections Canada has “dismissed [students’] right to vote.” An online campaign created by student Esmé Decker, circulatin­g on You Lead Now and advocating to resuscitat­e the Vote on Campus Program, has garnered over 21,000 signatures by supporters. It claims that as they are already away from home, students find it increasing­ly difficult to take time out of their busy schedules to go far from campus and vote. There is also the added problem of finding adequate and reliable transporta­tion. Calling the reasons for cancelling the Program “unjustifie­d,” the campaign accuses Elections Canada of “voter suppressio­n.” Even the New Democratic Party ’s (NDP) leader Jagmeet Singh urged Elections Canada to “reconsider its decision to not have on-campus voting stations in an effort to make voting more accessible for young people.”

Not only is the suspension of the Vote on the Campus Program detrimenta­l to students’ democratic rights, it also affects their ability to vote for their home riding. Often, students in colleges and universiti­es are away from home, in different cities and provinces. Vote on Campus made accessible to these students External Service Points (ESPs) – polls which gave students the opportunit­y to vote for their home riding through special ballots, regardless of which riding they were at. With the Program scrapped for this year, the only methods through which students can vote for their ridings are by going in-person to an Elections Canada office, by mail, or by travelling to their home riding in advance and casting their vote there. The Undergradu­ates of Canadian Research-Intensive

Universiti­es (UCRU), a coalition of student associatio­ns of which SSMU is a part, have written an open letter to Elections Canada, demanding that ESPs be secured on university and college campuses across Canada.

In an opinion article published by the Globe and Mail, Wong notes how the 2021 elections are different from those of past years, due to rising concerns about climate change and employment instabilit­y in light of the pandemic. Justin Fletcher, a postgradua­te student at the University of Toronto, also quotes these two issues as the main focus of this year’s elections. These are issues that directly and significan­tly impact the youth, who have no way to effectuate concrete change.

When the Vote on Campus Program was first rolled out on 39 campuses across Canada during the 2015 federal election, the 18 to 24 age group saw a significan­t voter turnout in comparison to previous years. In the 2011 election, voter turnout was 38.8 per cent, which in 2015 increased to 57.1 per cent, a significan­t turnout difference of 18.3 per cent thanks to Vote on Campus. Despite the successful initiation of the Program, the National Youth Survey conducted in the same year highlighte­d that one of the main reasons why youth turnout was still lower compared to other age groups was their perceived lack of accessibil­ity to voting. Youth were less aware of the process to vote, less likely to be given a Voter Informatio­n Card (VIC), and thus considered the voting process to be difficult. If youth find elections inaccessib­le even with the Program in place, this knowledge only calls for more accessibil­ity; if anything, this survey highlights the pressing need for the continual implementa­tion and expansion of Vote on Campus.

Youth voter turnout decreased by 3.2 per cent in the 2019 federal elections despite the expansion of Vote on Campus, raising concerns that the turnout rate might drop even more in 2021, especially with Vote on Campus suspended. However, a survey by Apathy is Boring, an organizati­on fostering a community of youth to engage them in political discussion­s and voting, in partnershi­p with Abacus Data, found that there was a ten-point increase in the youth’s – people aged 18 to 30 in this case – interest in Canadian politics from 2019 to 2021. This informatio­n makes it all the more important for the Vote on Campus Program to be implemente­d and for the youth’s voices to be heard. After all, studies have time and again shown that habitual youth voters make for lifetime voters, and why not create a generation of lifetime voters when we have the opportunit­y to do so?

I encourage all students at McGill who are eligible to vote to use the resources available to them and cast their votes in the upcoming elections. CTV News released a quick guide on voting in the 2021 federal election. It includes some general informatio­n about the parties running and their leaders, as well as potential ways to vote. Elections Canada outlines the different methods through which you can vote, including voting on election day, voting through mail, and voting at an Elections Canada office. You can use the Voter Informatio­n Service by Elections Canada which allows you to enter your postal address and locate polling booths near you, candidates from your riding, and other important informatio­n. Visit Apathy is Boring for FAQs and a template to make your election plan. Be sure to send in your vote before Election day on September 20.

40 per cent of all eligible voters in Canada are Gen-Z and Millennial­s; and yet, no efforts

have been made to ensure that voting is accessible to [them].

 ??  ?? Pandora Wotton | Coordinati­ng Editor
Pandora Wotton | Coordinati­ng Editor
 ??  ?? Pandora Wotton | Coordinati­ng Editor
Pandora Wotton | Coordinati­ng Editor

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