A welcome slap to the face of political apathy

If you caught the faint whiff of smoke on Monday evening, it could have been from the phone lines and Wi-Fi signals that were burning up as members of the public scrambled to beat the deadline to register to vote.

In total, a record half a million people registered to vote in the final hours before Mondayโ€™s midnight deadline. Admittedly, many tens of thousands of others missed the boat. But the size of the response was not only a vindication of the money spent on an ad campaign to encourage voter registration. It was also a welcome demonstration of the publicโ€™s appreciation of the importance of this election โ€“ contrary to the views of comic turned activist Russell Brand, who has labelled the election irrelevant.

Despite turnouts for local and European elections being little short of miserable, Britons arenโ€™t awful when it comes to voting in general elections. Official figures show that in 2010 the turnout was 65.1 percent. Even the lowest turnout of recent times โ€“ the 2001 election (when a Labour victory was all but certain) โ€“ was stillย  59.4 percent.

The number of registrations to vote on Monday suggests that we will hopefully be on the way to similar turnout levels come 7 May. They will be sorely needed in such a closely contested election โ€“ one that throws up all manner of permutations as to which parties might be included in the next government. Admittedly Mr Brandโ€™s comments โ€“ along with his suggestion last year that people shouldnโ€™t bother to vote โ€“ were not a promotion of apathy. But with British politics being more fragmented than at any point in living memory, itโ€™s a welcome sign that a majority of voters will determine which party or parties at least have the right to discuss forming a government.

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For information on the policies of the main political parties, please visit www.de-mob.co.uk.

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