“Voting in primaries” is US specific, but it is significantly stronger than “voting in other elections.” We have an order of magnitude more people voting in state elections than in primaries.
In fact, it’s probably the strongest thing that you can do to influence politics in America. It’s significantly rarer than volunteering to help elect parties or writing letters to your senator, and everyone who’s at a primary already does those things.
I only bothered looking up the statistics for California, but there I found 31% of registered voters showing up for the 2012 presidential primary elections, as opposed to 75% for the general election. (The statistics for eligible voters are somewhat lower, but more or less proportionally so.) That’s a significant difference, but we’re not talking an order of magnitude, and I’d be very surprised to find that that many people are politically engaged in more substantive ways.
It’s significantly rarer than volunteering to help elect parties or writing letters to your senator, and everyone who’s at a primary already does those things.
Not really. Maybe this is true in the states that hold caucuses.
“Voting in primaries” is US specific, but it is significantly stronger than “voting in other elections.” We have an order of magnitude more people voting in state elections than in primaries.
In fact, it’s probably the strongest thing that you can do to influence politics in America. It’s significantly rarer than volunteering to help elect parties or writing letters to your senator, and everyone who’s at a primary already does those things.
I only bothered looking up the statistics for California, but there I found 31% of registered voters showing up for the 2012 presidential primary elections, as opposed to 75% for the general election. (The statistics for eligible voters are somewhat lower, but more or less proportionally so.) That’s a significant difference, but we’re not talking an order of magnitude, and I’d be very surprised to find that that many people are politically engaged in more substantive ways.
Not really. Maybe this is true in the states that hold caucuses.