David Frum on Canadian Voter Turnout
David Frum has an interview over at the Canadian Council for Democracy. I think the sentence that best reflects his thinking nowadays is that ”the point of politics is to produce good governments.”
From what I can see, it’s a diversion from this notion that leads to his concern in the American conservative movement.
The interview is mostly regarding what low Canadian voter turnout says about society. Full interview after the jump.
SP: And yet despite this, in the country’s last federal election, voter turnout was the lowest in the country’s history. Do you think that election fatigue is solely to blame for Canadians’ recent disengagement from one the primary civic activities of their democracy?
DF: A hair under 60% turned out – that’s pretty good, especially in a country with such a large population of newly arrived immigrants. It will take the newcomers a little time to feel oriented and familiar, to form the kinds of connections that inspire voting.
Besides: I’d be careful about using voter turnout as a measure of political health. US voter turnout rose dramatically between 2000 and 2008, because voters became increasingly dissatisfied with the way their government was run and because an increasingly partisan media enflamed cultural divisions.
Maybe we should interpret a low turnout in the same spirit as the old joke about the child who never spoke until at age 8, he told his mother: “The soup’s cold.” Stunned, she exclaimed, “You can talk! And yet you’ve never spoken until now?” He answered: “Until now, everything’s been fine.”
http://thecommons-ccd.com/2010/08/an-interview-with-david-frum/