Make Voting Easier
Joe Biden is now the
President Elect of the USA. Kamala Harris – the first woman to hold thís post –
will be the new Vice
President.
There is always huge
interest in Ireland about US
Presidential elections. The well known family connection between Joe Biden
and Ireland has reinforced this interest. Kamala Harris also has Irish roots as well as Tamil
Indian and Jamaican family connections. Her mother is
from India, her father from Jamaica. By coincidence both the President Elect and the Vice President Elect share the same family
name. Joe Biden is the great grandson of Owen Finnegan from the Cooley
peninsula in County Louth. Kamala Harris’ Jamaican great
grandmother’s first husband was
Patrick A Finegan, the mixed
race son of an Irishman of the same name.
Their story is the story of Ireland’s diaspora and our global
connections. Their family
history must be a fascinating
tale. The next phase of it will
be even more interesting. There
will be high expectations of
the incoming Vice President not
least among women and black American
women in particular.
Both Joe Biden and Kamala Harris have huge challenges before them and I wish
them well. I know
President Biden. The Irish and British establishments will
be watching him closely. I’m sure British representatives will soon be winging
their way to DC. But I’m also sure that Ireland’s friends in the Capitol will be wise to that and I’m confident they and Joe Biden will stand over their commitment to defend the Good Friday Agreement.
One aspect of the US
election campaign that we in Ireland should scrutinise more closely is the
effort put in by most states and electoral bodies to make voting in the
election as easy as possible.
Over 100 million
citizens voted by mail or in person in early voting. Millions stood in long
lines for hours in the weeks leading up to election day on 3 November. The
demand was so great that drive through voting booths were established in some
areas.
In 2016 47 million US
citizens voted early. This time that figure
was smashed ten days before polling day. The Covid-19 pandemic clearly played a
part in persuading people to vote early and by mail but the fact that voting
was made easier encouraged more citizens to participate in the democratic system.
Of course, there were
efforts to suppress the vote in some states but despite this the American
electorate chose to embrace all of the democratic methods available to them to
vote in historic numbers.
This is a lesson that
the two electoral systems on this island should examine closely. Despite claims
in the past of voter fraud there has been no evidence of organised voter fraud
over recent decades. What we do know, certainly in the North, is that every
year many voters find that for no reason they have been taken off the register.
Elections are about
citizens choosing who should have responsibility for managing the political
system, making law and taking the economic, health, social and environmental
decisions that will impact on their lives and their futures.
If a country as vast
as the USA with 250 million voters can facilitate and encourage massive postal
voting and in-person voting weeks in advance why can’t we?
If a country as
diverse as the USA and with 50 states with different electoral rules and
regulations can allow for in-person voting weeks before polling day. Why can’t
we?
The island of Ireland
has a population that is less than that of the state of Massachusetts. If the
USA can make voting easy for its citizens why can’t we?
A voting system that
makes voting easy – that encourages citizens to participate - while enforcing
rules and regulations to prevent fraud must be a positive to any democratic
system. More people voting is good for democracy and good for holding parties
and governments to account. It will also be essential for a fair outcome to the referendum on Irish unity when that day comes.
Polls telling a vital story
There is a fixation
with political opinion polls. I have a healthy scepticism of such polls. I know
from long experience that they rarely reflect the Sinn Féin vote and there have
been examples internationally, including last week’s US election, where the
final election result was significantly different to that predicted in the
polls.
Opinion polls have
been around for many decades and use different methodologies. As well as
evidencing the shifting political allegiances of voters in the North opinion
polls and electoral results have underlined the growing demographic changes
that are increasingly evident.
No month passes
without some new survey being published. It is then scrutinised and parsed from
every conceivable angle by political correspondents, academics, editorial
writers and bloggers who seek to read the public mood and identify possible
political trends.
Opinion polls have
also focused on the related issues of Irish Unity and a referendum on Irish
Unity. In May 2019, during the European and local government elections in the
South, an opinion poll conducted at polling stations for RTE recorded 65% of
respondents saying they would vote yes for a united Ireland if it were held the
following day.
This has been a
pattern in recent years. A LucidTalk poll two weeks ago reported that 43% of
18-24 year olds in the North would definitely vote to end the union with Britain.
The poll claimed that 34% would support remaining. Among those aged between
25-44 LucidTalk said that 42% strongly favour a United Ireland.
The public mood as
revealed in polls is also reflected in recent election results which have seen
political unionism lose its electoral majority. It’s all a long way from the
imposition of the Government of Ireland Act 100 years ago next month. Change is
clearly taking place.
Change too is taking
place in Scotland where an opinion poll last week for Politico said that
independence for Scotland now has a 12 point lead. This is the 11th poll in a
row which has claimed that there is majority support for independence.
The Scottish National
Party is busy planning for a referendum on independence and is honing its
arguments. According to the US based Bloomberg News the British government is
also planning to win public support in Scotland for retaining the Union.
So, the Scottish
Government is planning for
Independence. The British government is planning to challenge the independence
campaign. Yet, faced with many of the same challenges and a growing public
conversation around a referendum on Irish Unity An Taoiseach Micheál Martin and
the Irish government have chosen to prevaricate, obfuscate, distract and do
everything possible to avoid planning for a referendum or for a United Ireland.
Failing to plan is no plan.
Do you have an old An Phoblacht?
The republican paper An Phoblacht- now a quarterly
magazine - needs your help. Thís year it
celebrates 50 years of unbroken
publication. As someone who writes regularly about recent
republican history An Phoblacht and An Phoblacht/Republican News is a great resource.
However, over the
years editions of the paper were lost. That means we no longer have a complete
archive. So, we are looking for your help in completing our archive.
We need specific
issues of An Phoblacht/Republican News ranging from 1979-2015. If you or
somebody you know has an issue of An Phoblacht from this period and want to
help us, drop an email to admin@sinnfein.ie or call Ph: 01 872 6100. We look
forward to hearing from you.
Comments