Saturday, May 16, 2009

Every Vote Counts

Politicians and athletes are two groups of people who love to use clichés to avoid stepping out of line. The line “every vote counts” is as genuine an invitation to ask for you vote as the “it is what it is” when an athlete tries to rationalize what his/her performance is weak. Having said that, “every vote counts” is actually true, very true.

When the residents of Delta South went to the polls this past Tuesday, they probably did not know that the race would come down to a handful of votes. Wally Oppal (left), the province’s attorney general, was in a tough fight against independent candidate Vicki Huntington (below right). At the end of the day, Oppal appeared to have won the seat, but only by a mere 2 votes (CTV reports Friday evening that it is 3 votes). Because the margin of victory is so small, a court-ordered recount will take place later this month to check things over. (for details of this news, check out this link from CTV)

I do not necessarily care which way the re-count goes (except I feel a little bitter that Oppal bolted from my riding to vacate his seat for a hand-picked candidate by the Liberals), but if you are either a supporter of Oppal or Huntington, wouldn’t you be a little uneasy these days? If you are a supporter of either one, but did NOT go to vote this past Tuesday, how would you feel if the final result shows that the candidate you support is on the losing end?

Together with the fact that voter-turnout falls below 50% for the first time in a LONG while, it saddens me to know that so many people just do not care about this very precious democratic right that thousands and millions around the world are dying to have. Yes, I know many people do not like politics, and politicians are widely despised (and in many cases, rightfully so), but exercising that democratic rights is entirely different from supporting politics or supporting a politician. Casting an empty ballot is an expression of your disapproval of the candidates and/or the system; not casting a vote just means you do not care what the politicians do to you and your community.

Last year, we saw the Dosanjh vs. Young fight in Vancouver South during the federal election whose margin of victory was 21. This year, we have the Oppal vs. Huntington fight in Delta South. Can we still afford not to vote?

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