Less than 25% of eligible voters cast ballots in Brampton and Mississauga elections
Published October 25, 2022 at 1:48 pm
Experts say voter fatigue, non-competitive races and the non-partisan nature of local elections likely contributed to low turnout in many communities that voted for their municipal governments.
Early numbers from the Association of Municipalities show 36 per cent turnout across the 301 of 444 municipalities.
Brampton and Mississauga saw less than 25 per cent of eligible voters come out to re-elect incumbents, while Ottawa saw a little less than half of eligible voters – 44 per cent – cast ballots in an open race for a new mayor.
In fact, Mississauga’s 2022 voter turnout was 21.8 per cent, down significantly from the 2018 municipal election when 27 per cent of registered voters in the city cast ballots.
University of Windsor political scientist Lydia Miljan says municipal elections generally see lower turnout as voters have limited media coverage to look to and no political parties to guide their decisions.
She says voters in the province may also be fatigued after a provincial election in June and a federal election last fall.
University of Toronto political scientist Renan Levine says high-profile races in place like Toronto – which saw nearly 40 per cent voter turnout – and Mississauga were not seen as competitive and voters might have had a hard time deciding who to support even in communities with open races.
Voter turnout in Ontario’s 2018 municipal elections was 38.3 per cent provincially, the lowest among municipal election turnouts recorded since 1982.
The Canadian Press
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