Close Menu
  • Business
  • Education
    • Science
  • HBCU
  • Music
  • Politics
  • Tech
Featured Stories

Queen Latifah is hosting the 2026 AMAs and she’s ready

May 25, 2026

Why Trump is linking the Iran deal to Abraham Accords

May 25, 2026

Why retirement feels stranger than anyone warned you

May 25, 2026
Load More
What's Hot

Queen Latifah is hosting the 2026 AMAs and she’s ready

May 25, 2026

Why Trump is linking the Iran deal to Abraham Accords

May 25, 2026

Why retirement feels stranger than anyone warned you

May 25, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Queen Latifah is hosting the 2026 AMAs and she’s ready
  • Why Trump is linking the Iran deal to Abraham Accords
  • Why retirement feels stranger than anyone warned you
  • Why Michael Jordan called a hospice in Wilmington
  • Lizzo claps back at the tweet nobody expected
  • Eric AndrĂ© goes from locked out Netflix user to Netflix star
  • Ranking the 5 toughest offensive lines on Ole Miss
  • Tiger Woods makes a critical return to rehab center
  • Culture
  • Money
  • World
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Black TimesBlack Times
Subscribe
Monday, May 25
  • Business
  • Education
    • Science
  • HBCU
  • Music
  • Politics
  • Tech
Black TimesBlack Times
Home»Politics

Local elections decide your block. Are you even voting?

With turnout hovering around 20%, advocates and educators say the elections that decide school budgets, curricula, and party candidates are the ones flying furthest under the radar.
Gesi LloydBy Gesi LloydApril 23, 2026 Politics No Comments4 Mins Read
Florida, SAVE Act, local elections, Voting, redistricting
Photocredit: Shutterstock/Studio Romantic
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Presidential elections command national attention, wall-to-wall coverage, and record turnout cycles. Local elections, which determine who controls school budgets, who sets community policy, and who decides which candidates even appear on future ballots, routinely draw about 20% of eligible voters. The gap between those two numbers tells a story that civic advocates have been trying to correct for years.

The consequences of that gap are not abstract. They show up in classroom sizes, in school closures, in the direction a political party takes heading into a state race. The decisions made by locally elected officials land closer to daily life than most federal policy ever will, yet the elections that produce those officials remain largely invisible to the majority of voters.

Voter fatigue and information gaps drive the low numbers

Dr. Alana Hackshaw, a clinical professor at the University of Maryland’s School of Public Policy, points to two overlapping problems. The first is voter fatigue, the exhaustion that comes from being asked to engage in elections at every level of government with some regularity. The second is a shortage of accessible information about who is actually running and what they stand for.

Presidential races generate enormous media coverage that essentially does voter research on behalf of the public. Local races receive far less of that attention, which means staying informed requires a level of active engagement that many voters simply do not have the time or resources to sustain.

School boards and central committees hold more authority than most people realize

Two bodies that consistently fly under the radar are school boards and central committees. School boards control budgets, set curriculum, hire and fire district leadership, and make the operational decisions that shape a student’s daily experience. Recent debates over cell phone restrictions and school consolidations have drawn some public attention, but board meetings still go largely unattended.

Central committees operate within political parties and carry a different kind of influence. They recruit candidates, organize campaign infrastructure, and raise funds, which means they have a direct hand in determining whose name ever appears on a ballot. Their work happens mostly out of public view, but its effects reach every level of party politics.

Young voters are starting to pay attention earlier

Nadia Robinson, a senior at Baltimore Polytechnic Institute and intern with Baltimore Votes, a nonprofit focused on increasing voter participation, is preparing to cast her first ballot. Her time working as a poll worker has given her a practical familiarity with the voting process that most first-time voters do not have.

Her argument for early engagement is straightforward. Starting young makes participation a habit rather than a decision that has to be made fresh each election cycle. Baltimore Votes is built around that logic, working to bring younger residents into civic life before disengagement has a chance to take hold.

Budget cuts in Baltimore classrooms illustrate what is actually at stake

Jocelyn Providence, a mathematics teacher in Baltimore City Public Schools, has attended school board meetings for more than a decade. Over that time, she has watched budget decisions translate directly into classroom conditions. Cuts have produced larger class sizes and reduced staffing, changes that affect both what teachers can do and what students can access.

Providence’s position is that community members who pay taxes into the school system have both the standing and the responsibility to weigh in on how those funds are used. School board elections are where that input is formalized, and low turnout weakens the signal.

The argument for showing up is simple

Javey Adams, civics program coordinator for No Boundaries Coalition, frames the issue without much decoration. A vote in a local election is direct participation in the decisions that govern a neighborhood. The lower the turnout, the smaller the group making those decisions on everyone else’s behalf.

Local elections will not draw the same energy as a presidential race. The mechanics of civic attention do not work that way. But for the people who show up, the return on participation is immediate and measurable in ways that national elections rarely are.

Baltimore Baltimore Votes central committees civic engagement community politics local elections No Boundaries Coalition school board voter turnout youth voting
Gesi Lloyd

Keep Reading

Why Trump is linking the Iran deal to Abraham Accords

Trump targets Cuba as his foreign policy record frays

Trump approval drops to 35% as Republican faith wavers

Trump’s $1.8 billion idea is either bold justice or a conflict of interest waiting to happen

Redistricting battles spark fresh voting rights fears

Trump’s brutal shift on race that changed the GOP forever

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Login
Notify of
guest
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Our Picks
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss

Queen Latifah is hosting the 2026 AMAs and she’s ready

Entertainment May 25, 2026

There are very few entertainers who can walk into a room and immediately change the…

Why Trump is linking the Iran deal to Abraham Accords

May 25, 2026

Why retirement feels stranger than anyone warned you

May 25, 2026

Why Michael Jordan called a hospice in Wilmington

May 25, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

Editors Picks
Latest Posts

Subscribe to News

Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Home
  • Culture
  • Money
  • Sports
© 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

wpDiscuz