Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Cucuklillruunga!

"Cucuklillruunga" is the Yupik word meaning "I voted." Tuesday, I did my civic duty and voted in my second presidential election. And, while I am ecstatic with the results, I'm not writing this post to gloat or to advertise my own politics. Instead, I wanted to use this space to reflect on what it felt like to vote from somewhere that is so isolated from the rest of the United States.

Honestly, I haven't felt very isolated here in Bethel. I still read the news everyday, and keep in close contact with family and friends. Despite geography, I've never felt too far "off the map." Granted, I've definitely realized that many of the resources available in other places aren't available here (more to come on that in another post), but that has never made me feel isolated - it is just our reality here. However, on Tuesday, watching the election results roll in, I felt truly isolated for the first time.

After work on Tuesday, my roommates, a few of our friends, and I went up to Kasayuli (a Bethel subdivision) to the house we're housesitting. We took advantage of the leather couches and flat screen TV and put on CNN, watching each state change from grey to yellow to the ultimate blue or red. Keep in mind, that the end of our work day was 9p EST, so many states were already declared by the time we started watching. We sat there in anticipation, watching the electoral votes tally. And the whole time, Alaska remained at the corner of the map, cloaked in grey - grey, signifying that the polls were not yet closed. Grey, signifying that the votes hadn't been counted.

Senator Barack Obama was named our president-elect at approximately 8p AST. My friends and community-mates and I yelled and toasted and jumped up and down. I even cried watching Obama's acceptance speech, thinking that this would be one of those moments that I would always remember - a day that history was made. But in the back of my head, I couldn't help wondering, "What about my vote?" Alaska's polls hadn't even closed by the time Obama was named our next president. So, in reality, the vote I cast here in Alaska had no effect on the ultimate outcome of the election. It was not even counted before the ultimate decision was made. This realization went against all my views of our election process.

All day on Tuesday, when I called my clients, I excitedly asked them, "Did you vote? Are you going to vote? Are you excited?!" And, despite my own sentiment, nothing wore off on them. I heard responses like, "No, I don't vote. Nothing ever changes here, why should I vote." All day, I tried to talk them out of it, using my youthful idealism as a tool. I talked about civic duty, and the opportunity to change things, and the one tool that we are all given. They weren't having it. And, after watching the results pour in, I can't say I blame them completely. These people have grown up in a place that is ignored by the rest of the United States, most of them in situations that more closely resemble those in a third-world country than the rest of the US. And, sadly, they are right. Nothing on a federal level effects them. As Sylvia, the legal assistant in my office who grew up in Kasigluk (a village in the YK Delta) so wisely put it, "The only thing that changes for us is the size of our dividend. Life does not change. The issues do not change."

Now, I am not saying I approve of not casting a vote. However, after Tuesday, things are feeling very bittersweet for me here in Bethel. I am overjoyed at the turn the United States has taken, but very dismayed by the sobering reality that Alaska will always remain a "grey" state - both in its own eyes and in the eyes of the rest of the country.

2 comments:

Kevin said...

Fair warning, this one's pretty nerdy.

#1 Your comments remind me of the primary voting season. The fact of the matter is that, in most years, the states at the end of the season are virtually ignored because the earlier states have already selected the nominee. (That's why states like Iowa and New Hampshire always push to be first.) But this year, due to the battle between Obama and Clinton, the states who voted at the end actually became increasingly important. Voters in Indiana said they had never been so courted by a Presidential candidate before and, even though Obama narrowly lost, his presence in the state during the primary helped him win the state in the overall election. The moral being, Alaskans, do not despair.

Regarding individuals not voting:
#2 From an economic standpoint, if you have to spend hours on line waiting to vote and must sacrifice time at work (or doing some other essentially fulfilling task), then indeed voting is a complete waste when you take into account the extreme unlikelihood your vote will be the deciding vote. And if you're poor and every dollar counts, then voting is even less essential if you can be doing something productive instead.

#3 From a statistical standpoint, if other people choose not to vote, your vote thereby makes up a greater share of the votes cast and yours is given more weight. So, if you were trying to convince people just to vote without regards to who they would be voting for, it would actually have been in your interest to DISSUADE them from voting so that your interests would be given greater recognition.

And to continue on that note, didn't it feel more important to cast a blue vote in Alaska than in New Jersey, a state that has been blue for two decades?

Obligatory snarky remark: Leather couches? Were they made out of caribou?

Unknown said...

If it makes you feel any better, a Republican vote does not matter at all in New Jersey, because Jersey always goes Democratic.

However, if you lived in PA, or Ohio, or Florida, your vote does matter. Thank you electoral colleges..

(If elections were on Popular Vote, Bush would not have gotten in office his second time.)

But no matter how much people complain or have their issues with elections, it's still better and more fair here than in 99% of the world. So, even if your vote "doesn't count" everyone should vote because it is one of the best rights we have as Americans- and by not voting you are giving up one of the most influential privledges we have.

P.S. I think it's Australia that makes people pay $50 if they do not vote.