Vote mob and student turnout

The vote mob hit the U of C campus today. While the whole flash mob thing isn’t quite as cool and ground breaking as it used to be when they first started happening it is cool to see a bunch of students getting together and very loudly being excited about voting.

This election has been less than inspiring for the large part and living in Calgary you go into the polls knowing the Conservative candidate will win handily but that isn’t the point. It is about giving students the feeling that their vote is going somewhere — even if it’s just $1.75 — and that they are a part of this process and their voices need to be heard.

No one will give students a voice except us and we do have a lot of things that should be on our mind. We have piles of student debt — yes the federal government does play a role in this — and we would like to get jobs of some kind when we graduate. If the whole civic responsibility thing and the fact that it’s really very easy to go and vote — it takes about two minutes — isn’t enough then maybe the challenges that we face now and will face when we graduate should be.

Maybe this will inspire a few more students to think about voting, maybe it will make politicians a little more accountable but probably not. Politicians are not be giving us a reason to go out and vote so we need to find our own. I do not feel inspired but I do know this election will effect me. Charismatic politicians come and go, it is our job to bridge the gap. Vote mobs are a positive step in the right direction.

No comment

The Conservatives have been receiving a lot of heat on Facebook. The links appearing in my feed have unanimously been ABC and I don’t think this is because I don’t know anyone who supports the ideological positions of the Conservatives. Instead, it is because they have made themselves closed off and acted holier than thou, which to most of us is extremely off putting.

If Harper’s Conservatives want to act above us and refuse to take our comments, questions and criticisms then we will feel shut out and unwelcome. That the Conservatives have disabled the comment option on their Youtube channel should be upsetting to all Canadians regardless of party affiliation or where the CBC vote compass has placed them. If I can’t engage with a political party — and yes social media and Youtube are the place where I am most likely to do this — then a party can’t respond to my needs or views.

Their fear of criticism may come from either smug arrogance, deep insecurity or because they have something to hide. The Harper Conservatives are not coming into this election after having had a majority, even though they seem to act otherwise. Maybe there wouldn’t be so ABC videos, blogs, memes and websites if people felt that they were included or represented by the Conservatives. Until the Conservatives value and welcome input from outsiders they will be alienating to voters and hurting Canadian democracy.