Three Squirrels in a Pressure Cooker logo

Three Squirrels in a Pressure Cooker

Subscribe
Archives
October 13, 2024

Vote Early, Vote Often!

Actually, a pretty big hurrah for Elections BC

Vote Early, Vote Often!

Over the years I’ve swung widely when it comes to elections. I’ve worked for candidates, gone door to door, and I’ve chosen to sit out elections where none of the candidates seemed right to me. This year I’m working for Elections BC, training poll workers.

My work there feels like it’s in sharp relief to what I see happening south of the border.

The New York Times reports:

The current battle over voting rights — who gets to vote, how votes are cast and counted, who oversees the process — has turned what was once the humdrum machine room of United States democracy into a central partisan battlefield with enormous stakes for the future of American democracy.  Since the 2020 election, and spurred in large part by former President Donald J. Trump’s oft-repeated lie that a second term was stolen from him, the Republican Party has made a concerted new effort to restrict voting and give itself more power over the mechanics of casting and counting ballots.

The Brennan Centre, who discredit the claims of widespread voter fraud, and who fight for voter’s rights with research and analysis, say:

Over the last 20 years, states have put barriers in front of the ballot box — imposing strict voter ID laws, cutting voting times, restricting registration, and purging voter rolls. These efforts, which received a boost when the Supreme Court weakened the Voting Rights Act in 2013, have kept significant numbers of eligible voters from the polls, hitting all Americans, but placing special burdens on racial minorities, poor people, and young and old voters.

It has made me very happy to be working as part of the election team in British Columbia specifically because we seem to be free of this nonsense.

Whereas in the US people are urged, over and over, to check and double-check that their name is still on the voter’s list, in BC they are actively working to expand the list, and even to add the names of high-school students who will be eligible to vote in two or three years.

Where many US jurisdictions are working to place barriers in the way of potential voters, in BC the goal is to bring as many people as possible into the pool of electors.

Haven’t quite been registered to vote? Walk into any poll on voting day with a Drivers’ licence and something showing your address, and you’ll be added in minutes. Don’t have a Driver’s licence? There’s a long list of things that can prove you’re who you claim - including a prescription pill bottle.

Have you arrived at the polling station with none of your ID, but with your wife or roommate? They can swear an oath and vouch for you, telling Elections BC that you really are who you say, and that you live where you say.

And, in a first for me, because the big list of voters is now electronic, and synced across the province every few minutes, you can now walk into any voting place, anywhere, and they’ll print you a ballot for your local candidates on the spot.

What I am truly loving about BC Elections is the feeling that they trust the people who live in this province, that they really do have faith in the voters here, and that they see their role as doing everything possible to make it easy for people to vote.

And the two young parents who came by this week to vote in our office, with four children under six years of age? The enthusiasm of those little kids, and their excitement at getting their “Future Voter” stickers, was the highlight of our day!

Don't miss what's next. Subscribe to Three Squirrels in a Pressure Cooker:
Powered by Buttondown, the easiest way to start and grow your newsletter.