(by Tim McNabb, AmericanThinker.com) – One of my occasional self-imposed acts of civil duty is to work as an election judge. There is nothing very sophisticated about it. Typically, it is a test of one’s ability to cope with tedium.
Occasionally they get exciting, if you find fear of having a riot on your hands exciting, but for the most part an election official checks voter identification, asks them to sign the registration book, and offers the voter a ballot. …
…Under the best of conditions, working as an election judge is a great way to make 14 hours seem like 14 weeks, but if one believes that free and fair elections are the cornerstone of Western civilization and that America is the Last, Best hope, one is compelled to endure.
This election season, Saint Louis University (SLU) had a student-only polling site. Student leaders registered hundreds of members of the student body to vote in the November 4th election. These students, in conjunction with faculty and staff, negotiated with the St. Louis Board of Election Commissioners to have a precinct station right on campus.
The election judges present were all students. I was the Republican poll manager, and we had an alternate poll judge who was sent in case we needed backup. I arrived at 5:00 AM to get things set up and was greeted with eight fresh, chipper faces ready to do the heavy lifting of democracy. At least three members of the SLU faculty or staff were around, all lending hands and help to make sure things went smooth. The polling place was brightly lit, comfortably conditioned and just a few steps away from the restroom and a nice cafe.
Students were in line outside the poll to vote like they were hoping to score concert tickets. Inside the poll, my young crew lined up, raised their right hands and took the election judge oath about 20 minutes to showtime. We opened right on time with folks waiting in a queue that led all the way down the lengthy hallway and out the door.
Despite long lines, nobody crabbed, fussed or complained. The young judges cheerfully accepted instruction, faithfully fulfilled their duty and executed their tasks flawlessly. The voters listened intently, showed their student IDs, chose the optical scanner ballot or touchscreen machine … and quietly exercised their franchise.
I am used to the occasional confrontation with someone on election day. ….. This time I watched as young Americans clicked along like clockwork, excited to be part of the democratic process. We laughed, cracked jokes and had a wonderful time doing our civic duty and enjoying hot pizza at lunch and tasty sandwiches for dinner provided by a doting member of the faculty. …
It was as if I had died and gone to election judge heaven.
The university really outdid itself. The student voters and the university representatives running the precinct reflected extraordinarily well on the school. The faculty associates obviously took great delight in their students, and the respect and appreciation was mutual. I can say without equivocation or fear of contradiction that as an election judge I cannot imagine a nicer environment or a more pleasant experience on Election Day serving as a small cog in democracy.
Unfortunately … it is not in my nature to simply bask in the genuinely pleasant glow of a textbook example of how democracy ought to work and leave it at that. I cannot help myself, and must dwell on the cloud behind the silver lining. As wonderful the experience was, and despite the real affection and appreciation I have toward both the judges and the voters I must confess I am not keen about the whole idea.
This city is my home. On November 4th, hundreds of people marked ballots on races and initiatives that will have repercussions long after this class has graduated and begun to call other places home. A number of students asked if it was OK to leave some parts of their ballots blank since they did not know anything about the measure, but I have a feeling that many votes were cast in favor of or against propositions and amendments that I and my more permanent fellow citizens will be stuck with.
I believe strongly that my local, state and Federal representatives ought not be chosen by folk who are by nature transient. For instance, a young voter with a Texas drivers’ license was wearing a shirt supporting a “green power” initiative in Missouri (He politely took it off after being cautioned about electioneering within the poll). Why exactly should a kid from Texas be voting to create obligations on my public utilities when in a year or so he will be back in Dallas, Austin or Houston? Would it not be better for him to inform himself about the issues in his native Texas, talk it over with the folks back home and vote absentee there?
The issue obviously comes down to maximize participation through convenience. First, getting an absentee ballot requires more effort than filling out a registration form handed to you by a pretty girl or handsome young man in the student center while taking a break from studying. I do not begrudge a student who [loves St. Louis] their voice in our affairs if they see themselves living here after graduation, but a few blocks walk to a proper polling place is not too high a price to pay given the sacrifices made to secure that right. Moreover, students who are voting as Missouri residents, though they do not plan to stay, are denying their kinfolk and friends back home their support in the issues facing them.
To the second point, voter participation is no fetish of mine. Obama will be our next president, and I wish him well, but how many of my young friends could say in their heart that if McCain had succeeded in getting more voters out, how thrilled would they be at the “participation” for the sake of participation? It is for this reason I would rather be governed by representatives chosen by a relatively small number of people who spent time considering and reflecting on the weighty matters before our cities, counties, states and nation than to have meandering tidal forces of voters who can be moved by 30 second commercials or a piece of literature thrust in their hand between the parking lot and the entrance to the polling station. Better these informed few make the decisions than have our dies cast by people who cannot muster themselves to request an absentee ballot and send it back.
I personally think Election day should be April 15th [the deadline for income tax returns], and the citizen should have to cast their ballot on the back of the check they have written to the Departments of Revenue. This will never happen, but neither should we make voting so … convenient that the people become complacent and lackadaisical of it. If our beloved republic is worth the blood of patriots, it is worth an hour or two of reflection on election day while waiting for an open booth or a few postage stamps.
This article was first posted at AmericanThinker.com on November 14, 2008.
Reprinted here October 20, 2010 for educational purposes only.