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Voter Turnout May Rise in 2020, But There Are Still Plenty Who Are Opting Out

Keith Freund
/
WKSU

Ohio and most of the rest of the country have hit , something often celebrated as a victory for democracy. But some people will still be opting out of this and other elections.

Turnout among Ohio voters in 2016 dropped 4 percent from the 2012 presidential election, and early on there were fears that trend would accelerate this year in large part because of COVID-19.

So far the opposite has been true. But there are still people like Jeanette Collins, who are active and engaged and opting out.

鈥淚t鈥檚 two wings, but it鈥檚 the same bird,鈥 she said.

Collins is a retail employee who hasn鈥檛 voted since the 2000 election. She says that鈥檚 when she first felt distrust in the system. President George W. Bush defeated Al Gore after the U.S. Supreme Court sided with Bush in a battle over ballot recounts. Gore won the popular vote, but Bush got the Electoral College.

鈥淭he popular vote is basically for polls to kind of gauge how popular a candidate is. Whereas the electoral vote is what actually is counted,鈥 Collins said.

The message of who really matters stuck with her.

鈥淲ell, then what鈥檚 the point of voting if it鈥檚 just basically a bunch of old guys in the Capitol Building deciding who鈥檚 going to be voted?鈥 Collins said.

Collins isn鈥檛 alone. According to the many non-voters lack faith in the election system itself and believe that the popular vote doesn鈥檛 elect the president. Knight鈥檚 Evette Alexander says they feel disenfranchised.

鈥淭hey believe that fundamentally something about the system of voting is broken or rigged or somehow other forces are going to choose the president, for example, versus actual voters,鈥 Alexander said.

Even without the Electoral College, some people decide not to vote. Alexander says there鈥檚 some mistrust about how their votes will be counted. And some don鈥檛 have the time or energy in their overwhelmingly busy lives.

鈥淛ust feeling that crunch of life for some folks that don鈥檛 have a lot of leisure time between home and work demands,鈥 Alexander said.

Then there鈥檚 the history some have with voting. Collins recalls her ex-husband being turned away after waiting for two hours in a cold, rainy line at the polls.

鈥淚t further infuriated me. Here鈥檚 all these people who sincerely want to throw in their two cents in who they want to lead this country, and they鈥檙e being turned away,鈥 she said.

Some non-voters have more than a mistrust in the voting process. People like Boot. Boot, who asked to be referred to by first name only, believes electoral politics are fundamentally oppressive.

Boot has been an anarchist since college a few years ago.

鈥淏asically anarchism exists as a rejection of the state and the things that make up the state, and voting is an aspect of what we might call choosing your oppressor,鈥 Boot said.

Boot says they find other ways to contribute.

鈥淚, and a lot of other people I know, are doing a lot of things to help keep people safe, and provide services for people, and doing direct action in ways other than voting. So I really don鈥檛 want people to think that I鈥檓 copping out,鈥 Boot said.

They respect, though, that others make other choices.

Alexander says the chaos of social media has led some not to vote.

鈥淚t becomes a very confusing environment. In fact, when we survey nonvoters, more of them were getting information about politics from social media than other sources, but they trust the information on social media less,鈥 she said.

Alexander says changing nonvoters minds could begin with better civics education in schools, greater transparency in the process, and a better way to help people connect the dots between decisions made in Washington and their personal lives.

But the study also shows the dynamics may be changing.

鈥淟ess than a quarter of these nonvoters said that nothing at all could be done to motivate them to vote. Most of them said they could be motivated, and they gave reasons like having a candidate that they believed in and things like that,鈥 Alexander said.

How many of them believe in any candidate, or the system itself, will play out Tuesday on Election Day.

Copyright 2021 WKSU. To see more, visit .

Kellie Nock is a senior journalism major with a women鈥檚 studies minor from Cleveland, Ohio. She has experience in print, online and radio journalism. She serves as a blogger for The Burr Magazine at Kent State and a writer/DJ for Black Squirrel Radio, and has previously worked with The Kent Stater and KentWired. Her goal is to create stories that will have an impact and be remembered by readers.
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