The Week (US)

Editor’s letter

- William Falk

For a nation that prides itself on our pioneering role in democratic self-rule, we are not very good at elections. More than a week after the midterms, we still do not know who won several disputed House, Senate, and gubernator­ial races. (See Main Stories.) In this election, nearly half the eligible voters—about 115 million people—cast ballots, which is the highest-percentage turnout for a midterm since 1914. For this surge in enthusiasm, we can, of course, thank President Trump, who is demonstrat­ing even to disengaged citizens why politics matters. But compared with most Western democracie­s, a 49 percent turnout is pathetic. Based on the 2016 presidenti­al election, we rank 26th out of 32 developed democratic nations in turnout. Belgium had an 87 percent turnout in its last election; Sweden, 83 percent; Australia, 79 percent. Why the huge disparity? Those democracie­s actively encourage citizens to vote, rather than putting myriad obstacles in their path. If we truly wanted 80 percent turnout in the U.S., it wouldn’t be hard. Democracie­s with high rates of participat­ion automatica­lly register all citizens to vote. In the U.S., more than 50 million of our citizens—about 1 in 4—haven’t registered and weren’t eligible to cast ballots on Election Day. Countries that believe in democracy don’t hold elections on Tuesday, when most people are working; they cast ballots on Saturday or Sunday, or make Election Day a national holiday. Curiously enough, some Americans contend that we are better off if certain citizens do not participat­e in our democracy. Thomas Paine, a Founding Father and revolution­ary advocate of self-rule, would disagree. “The right of voting for representa­tives is the primary right by which all others are protected,” Paine wrote. People who can’t vote, he said, are like “slaves,” whose fate is determined by others. If we want to call ourselves a democracy, we can and should do better. Editor-in-chief

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