Time to show up: attend neighborhood caucus meetings this month.

AuthorGochnour, Natalie
PositionEconomic Insight

Utah faces a banner election year. In the next nine months we will vote on a US. president, a governor, a U.S. senator, four US. congressmen, 91 legislators and many more public officials. It's time to bring out the Woody Allen in all of us and remember that "80 percent of life is showing up."

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So let's talk about that 80 percent and Utah's unique caucus-convention system.

Utah is one of seven states in the nation with a caucus system. The others are Colorado, Connecticut, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota and Virginia. This year, Utah democrats will meet March 13th and Utah republicans will meet March 15th to elect delegates for the county and state conventions. These are big nights for the future of Utah and everyone of voting age should take note.

At the state level, republicans will elect 4,000 state delegates and democrats will elect 2,700 state delegates. These 6,700 delegates will meet April 21 at their respective state conventions and decide which candidates will advance to primary run-off elections and which candidates will be placed directly on the final election ballot. A delegate carries major responsibility and far too many people stand on the sidelines.

I recently asked an election guru how many people attend their neighborhood caucus meetings. She told me in a typical year about 2.5 percent of registered voters are in attendance. She added that two years ago the system experienced a doubling of attendance after Obamacare was signed and people developed a newfound interest in political advocacy. But even at 5 percent, the turnout is abysmal.

Just think if we experienced this type of absenteeism in other aspects of our lives:

If 5 percent of the workforce showed up for work Utah's entire economy would come to a screeching halt. If 5 percent of school children attended school the administrators would cancel classes. If 5 percent of Jazz players showed up for a game Tyrone Corbin wouldn't have enough players on the court to play a game. If only 5 percent of Jazz fans showed up for a game the team would have a measly 995 people in attendance, compared to the more than 19,000 dedicated fans who typically support our team.

If only 5 percent of the 535 members of Congress (House and Senate) attended a State of the Union address the House of Representatives would include the equivalent of the 27-member Florida...

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