In case you missed it, there was a gubernatorial election on Tuesday.
No need to panic. It was only the Democratic primary.
Primary elections are noble efforts to some. But, in practice, the state that was the home of notable democratic pioneers like Thomas Jefferson, Patrick Henry, and George Washington doesn't seem to care much about selecting candidates to represent a party. In the 2005 primaries, about four percent of registered Montgomery County voters came out to vote, split almost evenly between the two parties. Statewide, a total of 6.6 percent of Virginians voted in gubernatorial primary elections.
And yet, despite the fact that more people pack Burruss Hall to see Third Eye Blind than vote in a Montgomery County primary, the county spends around $3,000 per voter to hold primary elections. It seems like a disproportionate amount of spending, to put it kindly.
Whether or not you believe primaries are worth your time, we should all make sure that tax money is being spent efficiently. It is unfortunate that primary turnout is so low, but running more poll machines is not going to solve that problem. For that, you would need a major shift in local and American political culture.
The major issue lies in the fact that just about as many resources go into a primary election as a general election. There were as many precinct locations open to voters on June 9 as there were last November, when hundreds of people stood in line for several hours. The distance between Gilbert Linkous Elementary and Luther Memorial Lutheran Church, two Blacksburg polling locations, is 0.2 miles. It takes seven-tenths of a minute to drive from one to the other - going the speed limit.
It is certainly a Virginian's right to have a say in who represents his or her party. About 8,000 Republicans were involved in the nomination of Bob McDonnell as the GOP candidate. By contrast, over 175,000 voters came out for the Republican primary in 2005. Even with low turnouts, primaries get more people involved in the democratic process.
They are also a great way to learn more information about the candidates running for office, providing more opportunity for a broader range of potential candidates. Consider Creigh Deeds, who was relatively unknown before landing his Washington Post endorsement and is now the Democratic candidate for governor. Elections bring up stances on issues, candidate records, and, one would hope, rational debates, which are all important in the democratic process.
It isn't a matter of whether primaries are a waste of our resources. They don't have to be. The State Board of Elections should make a judgment call on how many resources to put into each election in any given year. Some years will be bigger than others.
In time, a larger primary election budget may become necessary. As media coverage and current events cause more people to take an interest in politics, more people seem to have something to say about politicians running for office, which we assume leads to voters exercising their right to actually have their say.
After all, Montgomery County doubled its Democratic primary voter turnout this year. There may be hope for democracy yet.
The editorial board consists of Sara Mitchell, Phillip Murillas, Thandiwe Ogbonna, Daniel Lin, and Geri Roberts.

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$3000 a voter? This isn't public funds I hope. Who actually receives this money anyway? I think I need to get involved in Big Voting since it seems like a pretty lucrative business.
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Quick: How many seconds is 7/10 of a minute? Take that $3k a vote and turn it into classes on writing concisely.
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haha yeah that 7/10 of a minute was ridiculous. And people wonder why rich people send their kids to private schools
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7/10 of a minute would be 42 seconds...a conversion much too difficult for the editorial board to figure out. The CT could also be somewhat responsible for the poor voter turnout in Montgomery county for the democratic primary this week. If the editorial board would take a jog down memory lane to the massive voter registration drives held fall semester 2008, and championed by the CT, then they would understand why only 4% of registered Montgomery county voters voted last Tuesday. No doubt thousands of students who live in Blacksburg only while attending school registered to vote before the 2008 presidential election. Seeing as most of them are home on summer break, I doubt many of them changed their registration back to their summer address (I did not) or drove back to Blacksburg for the vote. Stop whining about a high cost per voter in the county, an unfortunate circumstance that the CT is partially responsible for. Maybe a little of that number had something to do with the outrageously high number of voters currently registered in the county. In other words, the county probably allocated money for voting based on the number of registered voters.
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