Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
Comment

Mexico polls a lesson for the rest of the world

Where might we find a way to restore trust in our democracy?

In Mexico. And in ourselves.

You may be reading international news about a conflict over democracy in Mexico.

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador and his congressional allies recently passed legislation to strip the country's independent electoral authorities of some staffing, budget, and power.

That is a troubling development. But the breathless news reports leave out crucial context about how elections are actually run in Mexico. And that context should offer both reassurance about Mexico and a spark of inspiration to the rest of the world.

I know the context because I've spent years organising a global forum on democracy that takes place this week in Mexico City.

And despite the recent controversy, and despite the country's well-publicised problems with security, I've seen Mexico's democratic development and participatory innovations up close.

Of all the fascinating examples of Mexican democratic practice, one stands out -- Mexico's faith in everyday people to run elections.

Mexico has a system for finding election workers that is unique in the world: It holds a national lottery to draw those workers from among its citizens.

The lottery system began in 1997, during Mexico's democratic transition, as a trust-building measure for a country plagued by corruption and impunity.

The lottery draws one date and one letter. If the date is your birthday, and if the letter is the first letter of your second name, it's your turn to work the elections.

The process has three stages. First, recruiters reach out, even visiting your home, to confirm your interest. Second, you attend training sessions before the election. Finally, on election day, you and your neighbours run the balloting in a precinct, count votes, and fill out official totals.

Scholars of democracy often credit Mexico with having some of the best-run elections on Earth. This lottery system also explains why Mexicans, despite their political polarisation, retain one of the world's highest levels of faith in elections. INE, the national independent electoral body, is among the country's most trusted institutions, with more than 60% support in polls.

That trust reflects reality and is reinforced by experience. Virtually every Mexican has served as an election worker, and seen the trustworthiness of the electoral bodies for themselves.

I wish people in the rest of the world could have the same experience.

In California and across the US, poll workers are the targets of conspiracies, threats, and even violence. The same is true of election workers in nations on every continent, whether the workers are paid staffers, volunteers, or party hacks who shouldn't be poll workers at all.

To reduce threats -- and boost trust -- why not make the Mexican way of selecting election workers international standard? Angry folks might be less likely to target election workers who are their neighbours. And bringing regular voters into the process could provide a real check on perceived, and real, attempts to corrupt voting.

Of course, such a system can't be perfect. And Mexico's isn't.

For one thing, many Mexicans who are selected choose not to participate. As many as 100,000 of the people who received at least some training as election workers have been no-shows at election time, according to one study. But the system compensates for absenteeism. There are trained substitutes for missing poll workers. And if there aren't enough substitutes, precincts can ask for volunteers among voters.

Mexico's president has attacked electoral officials but hasn't directly targeted the everyday citizens serving as election workers. Still, his legislation to hobble the electoral bodies is likely to force big cutbacks in the staffers who train everyday Mexicans to run elections.

These cuts will put even more responsibility on regular people to handle their own elections. It's not ideal, but it also reflects the hard truth about self-government on this planet: Democracy is not something we can trust to other people. ©Zócalo Public Square


Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column and the Democracy Column for Zócalo Public Square.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.