JAMILA'S MEMO: Can’t vote won't vote, the loud silence of the youth
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Yesterday I met a very talented Kenyan gentleman
who told me that he has never registered as a voter and is in no hurry to do so
and neither will he ever queue in a polling station to cast a ballot.
I asked whether he did not want to have a say
in the leadership of his country, but the man insisted that he did not see the
need. In another case that is just as intriguing, a lady I met a few days ago
told me she mutes her television or gets busy with other things when
politicians speak on television or radio. She tells me none of them have
inspired her to listen to what they have to say nor given her a reason to vote.
I give these two examples after IEBC announced
that it had not met its target in the extended voter registration exercise. The
election body had hoped to register 6 million new voters, most of them young
people who had turned 18 since the last General Election in 2017. But only
1,413, 444 new names entered the voters roll.
There have been calls for extending the time,
hoping for the Kenyan culture of last minute to come through to register more
people. There has also been some push and pull with the courts being involved, but
the exercise ends tomorrow and nothing short of a miracle will push those
numbers anywhere close to the target by close of business. And there is every
reason to believe that even giving more funding to the IEBC for the exercise to
continue will not solve the problem.
These statistics raise more questions than
answers. Several reasons are being given for these low numbers, among them
voter indifference. People say they just don’t want to vote. So I ask, why
don’t these Kenyans want to engage? The youth who were being targeted in this
exercise have just not seen the need to involve themselves. Maybe they are
asking themselves where they factor in the politics of this country. Or are our
politicians just failing to inspire anymore? Is the fact that no new names are
emerging on the scene a factor?
The low voter registration turn out should
worry us, and questions need to be asked. For instance, what do the youth turn
up for? Politicians like packed rallies full of energetic youth singing
colorful praises, wakiitikia wanasiasa
wanapozungumza, but why doesn’t this reflect in the voter register in terms
of numbers? Okay, let me give the benefit of doubt to the campaign crowds and
assume they are registered, but will they turn up in large numbers to vote on August
9, 2022? And how come very few of these
politicians use these rallies as an opportunity to encourage the listening and
cheering youth to vote?
I remember when we were growing up, we could
not wait to turn 18, and register as a voter, and finally exercise our democratic
right to choose our leaders. And have the black mark on your finger to show
that you did so, proudly showing it around: I voted!
But when I see and hear young people today
asking why should I? Then something fundamental has shifted and changed. Do
they feel so excluded that they see no need to be involved? Are the methods of
voter education and political engagement been so overtaken by the passage of
time that young people can’t relate? Or have they been so disillusioned by
previous badly conducted elections that they have despaired? If so, what needs
to be done to have them have the belief and faith that their voice counts?
These questions need urgent solutions. Every
effort must be made to urge them to willingly get involved. Because when
roughly 70% of the population is excluded from such monumental national
exercises like an election, it can’t be good for the country. Those young
people are saying something, by not engaging, we better smell the coffee and
change tack.
And that is my memo.


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