Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Young Voter Turnout Jumped Sharply In 2015 Contest, Elections Canada Reports

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jun, 2016 12:57 PM
    OTTAWA — Elections Canada says the turnout of young voters in last October's election was up sharply from 2011.
     
    The agency says voter participation among those aged 18 to 24 rose by 18.3 percentage points to 57.1 per cent, up from 38.8 per cent in 2011.
     
    That's the biggest jump for that age group since the agency began tracking demographic data in 2004.
     
    Among those eligible to vote for the first time, the percentage was 58.3 per cent.
     
    The official turnout rate overall was 68.3 per cent, with voters age 65 to 74 recording a 78.8 per cent participation rate.
     
    Voter participation on aboriginal reserves was also up, with 61.5 per cent of registered voters casting ballots, up 14 points from 2011, the agency says.
     
    Elections Canada said Statistics Canada surveyed people after the October election, asking those who did not vote why they stayed away from the polls.
     
    Almost a third said they were not interested in politics, while nearly a quarter said they were too busy to bother.
     
    Elections Canada conducted a youth survey after the October vote and reported that while young people are generally satisfied with the way democracy works in Canada, more than a quarter of those surveyed are somewhat or very dissatisfied.
     
    Dissatisfaction was highest among aboriginal youth (37 per cent) and youth with a disability (35 per cent).
     
    When asked in the survey to agree or disagree with a series of statements about politics and voting, youth and older adults generally demonstrated similar attitudes, although the young were less likely to feel their votes made a difference.
     
    Youth were also more likely to say politics and government are too complicated.
     
    Young people were less likely than older adults to feel that by voting they could make a difference and more likely to feel that politics and government seem too complicated.
     
    The results also suggested different degrees of interest in politics between young and old.
     
    Those over 35 expressed more interest and were far more likely to see voting as a duty, not a choice.
     
    Young voters were about evenly split on the duty-choice question.
     
    While the results suggested that young people were less likely to have been contacted by a political party or candidate, they did report a level of engagement in politics.
     
    They are most likely to report they searched online for information about politics.
     
    And 40 per cent of youth, but just 29 per cent of older adults, used social media to share political information. That figure rose to 54 per cent among aboriginal youth and 51 per cent among youth with a disability.
     
    Youth and older adults indicated that they used different sources to get information about the election.
     
    The youth were most likely to use a media website or other web source (23 per cent), followed by television (20 per cent) and social networking sites (19 per cent).
     
     Older adults were most likely to rely on television (37 per cent), followed by media websites (19 per cent) and newspapers (16 per cent).

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Private Investors Eye Public Assets Like Airports, Highways: Investor

    Private Investors Eye Public Assets Like Airports, Highways: Investor
    The federal Liberals are considering a system that could see Ottawa — as well as other levels of government — sell infrastructure assets under their jurisdiction.

    Private Investors Eye Public Assets Like Airports, Highways: Investor

    Five Youth Suicides This Year In The City Of Woodstock, Ont., Raise Concerns

    Five Youth Suicides This Year In The City Of Woodstock, Ont., Raise Concerns
    WOODSTOCK, Ont. — Police in a southwestern Ontario city say that five people aged 19 and younger have killed themselves since the beginning of 2016 in what an official of the Canadian Mental Health Association is calling a "suicide contagion."

    Five Youth Suicides This Year In The City Of Woodstock, Ont., Raise Concerns

    Missing Skull, Leg Bones Of Yukon Horse Skeleton Returned To Newspaper

    Missing Skull, Leg Bones Of Yukon Horse Skeleton Returned To Newspaper
    The Whitehorse Star reported last week that the skull and some leg bones of a horse skeleton appeared to have been taken from an excavation site.

    Missing Skull, Leg Bones Of Yukon Horse Skeleton Returned To Newspaper

    Suncor Says Fort McMurray Oilsands Operations To Be Back Up By End Of June

    Production was cut back by the wildfire that hit the city — forcing the evacuation of more than 80,000 people — in early May.

    Suncor Says Fort McMurray Oilsands Operations To Be Back Up By End Of June

    Port Alberni To Be Site Of Massive 9.0 Earthquake, Tsunami Disaster Drill

    Port Alberni To Be Site Of Massive 9.0 Earthquake, Tsunami Disaster Drill
    More than 60 different organizations and 600 people are participating in the 3-day earthquake drill

    Port Alberni To Be Site Of Massive 9.0 Earthquake, Tsunami Disaster Drill

    Rod Zimmer, Former From Manitoba Senator Who Made Headlines In Controversies, Dead At 73

    Rod Zimmer, Former From Manitoba Senator Who Made Headlines In Controversies, Dead At 73
      A party official confirms that Rod Zimmer died this morning at the age of 73.

    Rod Zimmer, Former From Manitoba Senator Who Made Headlines In Controversies, Dead At 73