Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Most Americans probably won’t vote in November. Here’s why

- By Sabrina Tavernise

MADISON, W.Va. — Lula Hill voted in just about every election once she became old enough in 1952. Her coal mining family of registered Democrats believed that elections were like church services: You didn’t skip them.

But over time, her sense of civic obligation faded. Mines started laying off people. Opioids started poisoning her neighbors. As her town lost its vigor, Hill watched as smiling politician­s kept making promises and, in her view, growing richer. By the late 1990s, when political leaders — Democrat or Republican — talked about the greater good, she no longer believed them.

“I just got to the point, I said, ‘I’m not going do it anymore,’ ” said Hill, sitting on a couch in the lobby of the hotel she owns and runs, the Hotel Madison, 30 miles south of Charleston. “I just can’t vote for any of them in good conscience.”

She has not voted since 1996 and said she had no intention of starting in November. Hill is hardly alone in West Virginia, a state with one of the lowest rates of voter turnout in the country and where the Democratic senator, Joe Manchin III, faces a tough race.

This year’s election carries enormous political stakes, but if history is any guide, the vast majority of eligible voters will stay home on Election Day. Slightly more than a third of eligible voters turned out across the country in the last midterm elections, the lowest share since 1942, according to Michael McDonald, a political scientist at the University of Florida who runs the United States Elections Project, which tracks voting data back to 1789.

And experts say that in November, it is unlikely to break out of the middling range it has been stuck in for nearly a century.

People typically cite one of two reasons for why they do not vote in midterm elections: They are either too busy or not interested, according to McDonald’s analysis of responses to the Census Bureau from 2000 to 2016.

“The costs of voting are not terribly high compared to the way they’ve been at times in American history,” said Benjamin Highton, a political scientist at the University of California at Davis, who has studied voter ID laws. “People simply have other things they are more interested in, like making ends meet on a day-to-day basis.”

Americans used to vote at much higher rates — sometimes above 80 percent in the second half of the 19th century. In those years, a multitude of parties brought a vibrancy to political life. Party machines helped people with jobs, fuel bills and funeral expenses in return for votes.

But turnout declined sharply from 1900 through the 1940s, as the power of the party machines declined and voter suppressio­n shut out blacks in the South and many immigrants in the North. The rate of voting has never recovered. The last time more than half of eligible voters turned out for a midterm election was 1914, McDonald said.

The United States’ turnout in national elections lags behind other democratic countries with developed economies, ranking 26th out of 32 among peers in the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t, according to the Pew Research Center.

Perhaps the most significan­t change has been in who votes. More than 80 percent of Americans with college degrees vote compared with about 40 percent of those without high school degrees, according to Jonathan Nagler, a political scientist at New York University and co-author of a 2014 book, “Who Votes Now.”

“There is a class skew that is fundamenta­l and very worrying,” said Alexander Keyssar, a historian at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard, who wrote “The Right to Vote.” “Parts of society remain tuned out and don’t feel like active citizens. There is this sense of disengagem­ent and powerlessn­ess.”

The effect, he said, has been a more unequal society and “more of a gap between what we say this country is about and what it really is.”

Clara Bender, 69, a waitress in Madison, has never voted.

“I just never got into it,” she said, as she cleared a table for a customer. “I got married, had babies — just never had the time.”

To Carrena Rouse, an English teacher at Scott High School, that is a bitter pill, especially after watching the extraordin­ary energy over the statewide teachers’ strike this year.

“People say my vote won’t do any good, but I beg to differ,” said Rouse, who was among the thousands of teachers who went on strike.

She believes the state is dominated by coal money and politician­s who pander to it precisely because people let it be by not voting. And she thought the teachers’ strike and the outpouring of public support they got would translate into more votes in the state’s primary in May.

But she was disappoint­ed that only 26 percent of registered voters went to the polls, “after everything that happened,” she said. “That’s the disturbing part. I don’t want to use language like ‘betrayed,’ but pretty close.”

Still, the voting rate on Primary Day was up by nearly a third from the primary in 2014, according to West Virginia’s Office of the Secretary of State.

More young people went to the polls, too. According to TargetSmar­t, a political analytics company in Washington, D.C., turnout for people under 30 was up by half in the West Virginia primary compared with the primary in 2014, but was still less than the national rise.

Many younger people interviewe­d in Madison last month said that they would vote, but that they did not spend much time thinking about politics or consider it a part of their identity.

Jennifer Anderson, a worker at Miller Brothers Pharmacy, said she would probably vote, but she has not yet decided for whom or for which party.

“Some of my issues are on one side, and some are on the other,” she said.

Turnout in West Virginia was higher in May despite a new voter ID law the state put in effect in January. Generally, new laws around voting access can make it easier or harder to vote, but researcher­s say they do not explain much about the country’s lackluster turnout. About 2 percent of people told the Census Bureau they did not vote in the last midterm election because of problems with registrati­on, according to McDonald.

For Hill, national politics feels distant these days, as if events are happening on another planet.

“I’m just to the point where I’m so disillusio­ned over what goes on,” she said of politician­s in Washington and her state. “All they are doing is slinging mud at each other. If they would just stop the squabbling and think of the people.”

Besides, she had more important things to think about. She was busy washing sheets and cleaning rooms. A pipe was leaking and she needed a plumber.

“My sister said, ‘Sis, we didn’t vote so we don’t have the right to complain,’ ” she said. “That may be true, but I might have felt even worse voting for some of these people.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY MADDIE MCGARVEY / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? “People say my vote won’t do any good, but I beg to differ,” said Carrena Rouse, an English teacher who was among thousands of teachers who went on strike this year.
PHOTOS BY MADDIE MCGARVEY / THE NEW YORK TIMES “People say my vote won’t do any good, but I beg to differ,” said Carrena Rouse, an English teacher who was among thousands of teachers who went on strike this year.

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