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Vote for your children’s future



Rob Okun

“Nobody will ever deprive the American people of the right to vote except the American people themselves,” Franklin D. Roosevelt said. “The only way they could do this is by not voting.

Since midterm elections rarely have the pizazz of a presidential contest, a lot of eligible citizens don’t bother to vote in them. To a growing number of those citizens who do vote, failing to cast a ballot this year would be comparable to crewmembers of the Titanic abandoning their posts as the ship approached the iceberg. I’m not being hyperbolic.



Choose your own definition: we’re in a crisis, we’re at an inflection point, the shift has hit the fan. However you characterize this moment in the United States of Disruption, people across the political spectrum agree: staying on the sidelines this election is a cop-out.

FOR THE CHILDREN

To a growing number of citizens, it’s hard to fathom that anyone would feel apathetic about voting this fall. If you’re thinking about sitting out, take a minute to consider the world your children and grandchildren will inherit. If you don’t want to vote for yourself, then vote for them. 

In the U.S. — like in so many other countries on every continent — the natural environment is being battered by one catastrophe after another, from unprecedented wildfires to super hurricanes. Our interconnectedness among the family of nations means that these emergencies — as well as the floods in Pakistan, the blistering heat waves from India to Europe and the droughts from Africa to China and, of course, the war in Ukraine — are affecting life from the gas pump to the grocery store. 

Will connecting these dots, as well as the others that reveal the fragile state of democracy, contribute to more citizens voting? I hope so.

There’s a growing movement of people who believe that not voting should be against the law. Think that’s farfetched? Consider Australia. It’s compulsory for every eligible Australian to vote in all elections and referendums. That’s a worthy model for Congress to look into adopting down the road. Right now, though, whether by mail, early, or on the day of, vote.

Compared to most high-income countries, turnout in the U.S. is below average, the Council of Foreign Relations reported in August. In the 2020 national elections, for example, just 62% of eligible citizens voted. Contrast that with high-turnout countries, including Belgium, Sweden and the Netherlands, at 75% or higher.

In 2020, only 70% of eligible voters were registered, the Census Bureau reported. Since citizens can still register in many states, reach out now to those you know among the apathetic 30%.

IT’S PATRIOTIC

If voting to ensure that future generations have a livable planet to inhabit isn’t reason enough, how about voting as a patriotic act? Despite the term being variously interpreted by different constituencies, perhaps we can all agree on one core belief: patriotism places the well-being of the nation ahead of our own.

In this fraught moment, patriotism certainly means more than “public service” or “volunteering” or “being a good citizen.” Being a patriot today is akin to a firefighter rushing into a burning house, except it’s not to save the inhabitants. It’s rushing into a house divided in order to save democracy from being scorched beyond recognition.

In considering sharing these ideas with those you know or suspect aren’t planning to vote, remind them of these basic truths:

• Voting is important because it’s the best way to ensure our voice is heard in how government is run.

• Voting is important because the people we choose to represent us have real impact on our lives.

• Voting is important because the freedom to vote is among our most cherished rights.

• Voting is important because it expresses our commitment to each other, our country, the world and ourselves. 

The actor-activist Jesse Williams has an answer for those who don’t vote: “If someone says, ‘I was making a statement by not voting,’ then you say, ‘Well, I can’t hear it.’”

Plato, more than 2000 years ago, went even further. “One of the penalties for refusing to participate in politics is that you end up being governed by your inferiors.” 

To quote nearly every U.S. president, “Vote.”

Rob Okun, syndicated by Peace Voice, writes about politics and culture. He has edited Voice Male, a magazine chronicling the antisexist men’s movement, for more than a quarter century. Email him at rob@voicemalemagazine.org.