Nov. 7th, 2012

blimix: Joe by a creek in the woods (Default)
The main thing: Thank you all for voting!

Oh, I guess there is something more to be said. New York provides no useful information to voters. I've only ever voted in New York, so this seems normal to me, but I spoke with a friend from California who pointed out how fucked up it is that we don't even get voter guides here.

Typically, I have to find my town's Board of Elections web site for a candidate list. This looks comprehensive, but doesn't even mention ballot initiatives, so you'll be surprised by them if you haven't looked for them separately. (I just had to trust the unofficial sources that said there were no initiatives this year.) Now I know who is running for what, and with which parties. It tells me nothing whatsoever about what the candidates stand for, so that takes a lot of hit-and-miss web searching. (This year, my vote for one office wound up being swayed by a single person's anecdote, for lack of better data.) Good luck finding any info at all on local school board candidates.

Then I have to find out my districts for the state Senate and Assembly, so I'll know which candidates I actually get to vote for. My voter registration card mentions a ward and district that have nothing to do with these. A web search led me to www.nysenate.gov, where I put in my address, and it gave me my Senate and Assembly districts. The only problem: My ballot turned out to be for different districts (both Senate and Assembly) than the Senate web site gave me! Having done the research on the wrong candidates, I was forced to vote along party lines instead of by merit. (And yes, I'll be sure to mention this to the DOJ.)

The fact that New York voters have to go to special lengths like this — not even to make an informed decision, but just to know what decision they'll be asked to make — is absurd. The fact that even those special lengths can get sabotaged is disgraceful.

I should also add that, because party affiliations are the only obvious information on most local candidates here, they will determine nearly every race in New York. Therefore, your best chance to do any good, beyond merely voting for the lesser evil (which is itself important!), is to vote in the primaries. Some excellent people run, and sometimes come pretty close to ousting the entrenched douchebags. Not a lot of people vote in the local primaries, so a few more concerned voters can make a world of difference.

And whom do we talk to about making voter guides a real thing in New York?
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