This article is updated and reprinted from the October 17, 2018 issue of Common Sense for the Eastern Shore.
I don’t have time.
Early Voting in Maryland is October 27-November 3, from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily. You can also request a mail-in ballot. For information and deadlines, visit the Maryland State Board of Elections Voter Resources page.
I can’t get to the polls.
Vote on the weekend during Early Voting, or vote from home with a mail-in ballot by contacting your local Board of Elections.
I don’t know any of the candidates.
Find candidates and what they stand for in their own words on Vote411.org — the League of Women Voters online Voters’ Guide. Check out incumbents’ voting records on VoteSmart.org. Attend Candidates Forums and the candidates’ own meet and greets.
My vote doesn’t count.
Several recent elections at both the national and local level have been won by just in few votes. In Virginia a tie was broken by a coin flip. If you lived in Virginia and didn’t vote, you could have decided the election all by yourself just by voting! Remember, one sandbag doesn’t do much against a flooding river either — but if it’s added to hundreds of thousands of sandbags, it can hold back the Mississippi. When you add your vote to hundreds of thousands of others, you’re helping change the direction of the future and the world.
According to the pollsters and pundits, people don’t bother voting in mid-term elections, so why should I?
Why not? What could be more fun than proving pollsters and pundits wrong?
What elected officials do in the Eastern Shore, Annapolis, and Washington has nothing to do with me.
It doesn’t? Think taxes, school funding, health care, gas prices, the environment, clean water, clean air, tariffs, national debt, immigration policies, rising seas, falling bridges, potholes, hungry kids...
Why should I care that Americans have been fighting and dying for over 250 years to protect our democracy and my right to vote? One vote can’t make any difference.
Really? One vote can break a tie, create a majority, pass a bill, change history. And though billionaires can fund SuperPACs and spend millions trashing candidates they don’t like, in the voting booth we’re all equals. Each of us gets to cast just one vote.
So, no more excuses, right? It’s time to get off the sidelines and into the action. Your vote is your voice. Vote as if your life depended on it, because it does. Your life, your family’s, friends’ and neighbors’ lives, and the lives of every human being on this planet depend on whether you, and millions of other Americans, care enough to vote this November. Please don’t let us down. Vote.
Francie Miller was a stalwart Democrat and activist in Chestertown, and a founding member of Common Sense for the Eastern Shore before she left us to move to California to be near family. We still miss her.
Title image: Sunset at Eastern Neck National Wildlife Refuge, Kent Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk