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David Bly: Participating in democracy isn鈥檛 that difficult

It couldn鈥檛 have been easier. My wondering how to register to vote in the May provincial election was resolved when a letter arrived with all the necessary information. Bring on the election, I said. I鈥檓 ready. Well, almost.

It couldn鈥檛 have been easier. My wondering how to register to vote in the May provincial election was resolved when a letter arrived with all the necessary information.

Bring on the election, I said. I鈥檓 ready.

Well, almost. Better see who the candidates are.

It took another 10 minutes on the computer to read up on the candidates who have filed so far in my riding.

This participating in democracy isn鈥檛 really that hard. More people should try it. A lot more.

In the 2009 provincial election, only 50 per cent of British Columbians voted. I鈥檓 sure most of you who sat on your hands had good reasons. After all, it was hockey season and the Canucks had lost to the Chicago Blackhawks the night before, ending their Stanley Cup chances for the year. After that kind of blow, who can focus on something trivial like an election? When you鈥檙e engrossed in figuring out what went wrong and pondering Roberto Luongo鈥檚 future, you鈥檙e not likely to have the mental energy to ponder the province鈥檚 future.

Besides, you know there鈥檚 going to be an election every four years. Who knows when the Canucks are going to be in the playoffs again?

鈥淚 think people are quite capable of dealing with hockey and an election,鈥 said then-premier Gordon Campbell after the election with the same certainty that he knew British Columbians would love their post-election surprise a couple of months later 鈥 the harmonized sales tax.

sa国际传媒鈥檚 voter turnout hit a record low in the 2009 election after declining from 70 per cent in 1983. At that time, chief electoral officer Harry Neufeld said people 鈥渨ere simply disengaged with the political process and just didn鈥檛 have an interest in following politics, being involved and being part of the voting process.鈥

It鈥檚 easy to be turned off by political shenanigans, soured on a process prone to being taken over by vocal special-interest groups and well-oiled (or just plain greasy) political machines.

But not voting is handing the election over to the ne鈥檈r-do-wells and manipulators. A low voter turnout is a grand opportunity for special-interest groups 鈥 they don鈥檛 have to work so hard to swing things their way.

I think Neufeld鈥檚 observation points more to plain old apathy than it does to disenchantment. People with more interesting things to do just can鈥檛 be bothered.

Here鈥檚 a solution that will increase participation, save money and be fun, all at the same time.

Don鈥檛 hold one of those boring old elections with ballots and voting stations. If the people won鈥檛 come to the election, take the election to the people. Do it on Facebook. The candidates can post their faces, along with the really important information, such as what they had for breakfast and what the cat just did on the carpet. That seems to attract a lot of attention these days.

Then instead of driving all the way to a place to cast ballots, we simply click 鈥渓ike鈥 for the ones we want.

Candidates鈥 kids can post pictures of themselves holding posters that read: 鈥淢y daddy says if we can get 15,000 鈥榣ikes,鈥 he will get us a new puppy and he will get an expense account about which he will be very vague.鈥

Enough smart-aleck stuff 鈥 an election is serious business. Dig through the silliness, the puffery and pomposity, and focus on the issues.

If you go looking for the perfect candidate, the one who aligns in every way with your views and aspirations, you are guaranteed to be disappointed. Ain鈥檛 no such animal. The best you can do is find the closest fit. You might even think you are forced to choose the least of the evils, but, despite what their opponents might say, most candidates are decent human beings with the capability of doing good things.

The odds of them doing good things are greatly enhanced if we let them know what we want and hold them accountable.

We need to stop regarding voting as a duty to be performed sporadically, and view it as a privilege as well as a right.