HIGHLY POTENT NEWS THAT MIGHT CHANGE YOUR VIEWS

Only about 52 per cent of electorate cast ballots in Ontario election

Citizens lineup at a Parkdale/High Park Polling Station at the Humbercrest United Church to cast their vote for the Ontario Provincial Election in Toronto on Thursday June 12, 2014. (Aaron Vincent Elkaim/THE CANADIAN PRESS)

by Kaleigh Rogers
The Globe and Mail
June 13, 2014

Voter turnout in Ontario’s election ticked up for the first time in almost 25 years, but the province still has one of the lowest turnouts in Canada.

Elections Ontario is estimating 52 per cent of eligible voters cast ballots in Thursday’s election, though final results won’t be published until June 18. The highest turnout was in Ottawa-Orleans with 61 per cent heading to the polls while the lowest turnout was in Mississauga-Brampton South, where just 42 per cent of eligible voters cast ballots.

“The reason why turnout is low in any given election is the same across all elections, which is that there is an increasing number of people who don’t feel like they have a duty to vote,” said Peter Loewen, assistant professor of political science at the University of Toronto at Mississauga, who said voter turnout is decreasing across Canada, particularly among young people.

Ontario’s voter participation is especially low when compared with the rest of the country.

While B.C., Alberta and Manitoba all had similar turnouts – a little more than half the eligible pool of voters – in their most recent elections, the rest of the provinces drew more impressive participation. Saskatchewan had 66 per cent of voters turn out in 2011, Quebec’s election attracted 71 per cent of voters this year and Prince Edward Island topped the list with a hefty 77-per-cent turnout to re-elect Liberal Premier Robert Ghiz in 2011.

Mr. Loewen said part of the difference boils down to size: In a small province such as PEI, the provincial government’s decisions have a more direct impact. Who you vote for could determine whether you have a job next year, he said.

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