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UnrepentantLiberal

(11,700 posts)
Wed Jan 30, 2013, 08:14 AM Jan 2013

Why are mayoral elections held in off years? [View all]

Jerramiah Healy, the mayor of Jersey City, is a corrupt machine politician that many people who follow Jersey City politics would like to see voted out of office. Pay to play, double dipping, pandering to developers, you name it. He does it all.

The problem is that the election for mayor of Jersey City is held the year after the presidential election, when most people are electioned-out and not paying attention. The Democratic primary election is even worse. Worse than that is that we have no local TV stations and only a small paper that no one subscribes to. So most in Jersey City know little about our mayor and even less about his opponents.

Steven Fulop is a local politician who has fought against pay to play. He's running for mayor this year. The problem is that Healy's machine is good at getting people who benefit from his machine to the polls. Not easy pushing him out of office.

http://www.fairvote.org/voter-turnout#.UQkULpPCsw8

-snip-

Low turnout is most pronounced in off-year elections for state legislators and local officials as well as primaries. In many cities, for example, mayors of major cities often are elected with single-digit turnout ; for example, turnout was only 5 percent of registered voters in a recent Dallas mayoral election, 6 percent in Charlotte, and 7 percent in Austin. Congressional primaries have similarly low turnout; for example, turnout was only 7 percent in a recent Tennessee primary, and was only 3 percent for a U.S. Senate primary in Texas. A statewide gubernatorial election in Kentucky has a turnout of only 6 percent since Kentucky gubernatorial elections are held in the off-off-year between mid-term congressional election and presidential elections was scheduled at a time when there were no elections for federal office. North Carolina’s runoff elections have seen turnout as low as 3 percent in statewide elections.
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