“Our Poor Voting Record” from the Editorial Page of the Daily Independent,
Kannapolis, May 24, 1954.
North Carolinians, as the painful facts support, do not attach
much value to their right and privilege of the free ballot in the exercise of
choosing their elected representatives to government.
A statistical study completed recently by the North Carolina
Research Institute shows that in 1952 only 52.53 percent of Tar Heels 21 years
of age and older bothered to vote in the presidential election. And that 52.53
percent figure represents the biggest vote ever recorded in North Carolina.
Among the 48 states, North Carolina ranked a shocking 39th.
Cabarrus and Rowan counties, while showing a higher percentage
than the state as a whole, have little to brag about in the voting field. Less
than 64 percent of the age-eligibles in the two counties troubled themselves to
go to the polls in 1952 to express their preference for President of the United
States.
Next Saturday the state’s predominantly political party—the
Democratic party—conducts its biennial primary. There are three important state
offices at contest, and a variety of important county nominations at state.
Consensus of expert opinion agrees that no more than 40 percent of the state’s
registered Democrats will trouble themselves to vote. About the same ratio is
expected in Cabarrus and Rowan.
Why this indifference to a privilege for which men have fought and
given their lives throughout the time of recorded history? Why this surrender
of Democracy’s prime weapon in the ever-continuing battle against tyranny?
We must confess we don’t know. Experienced politicians say that a
light vote indicates general approval of policies and personalities at the helm
of government. They thus imply that those not voting are, in effect, casting a
silent vote of approval or endorsement for the way their government is
functioning.
Sociologists who have delved into the mass political mind have
another theory. The non-voters, so say the sociologists, are convinced that no
matter how they vote, affairs of government will not change much one way or the
other. Theirs, one concludes, is a “so what?” attitude.
Short of legislation making it mandatory to vote—a suggestion we
reject as contrary to the very principle the franchise is supposed to uphold—we
believe the only real solution lies in our schools. There, we would suggest,
the citizen’s training for the responsibilities of government should begin.
Greater stress should be made on courses pertinent to the science of government.
A youngster who is impressed with the whys and wherefores of government will be
a responsible, self-thinking adult voter.
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Facts from the study cited in the editorial:
Utah had the highest percentage of voters in 1952. Nine states had
a smaller percentage of voters than North Carolina, and they were all Southern
states—Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina,
Tennessee, Texas and Virginia.
Wide variations exist among the 100 counties of the state.
Transylvania had the best record of any county. A total of 92.5 percent voted.
At the other extreme was Onslow, where only 26.36 percent voted.
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