What’s Going On With Democracy?
Maricopa County’s New Math
Maricopa County, Arizona, has decided that democracy needs a timeout. Officials claim it could take 10 to 13 days to count all the votes in the latest election. Yes, you read that right—almost two weeks to tally some pieces of paper.
This isn’t the 1800s, where counting by candlelight would excuse the delay. In fact, most third-world countries have election results within hours or days. But Maricopa, a crucial county in one of the most important states, can’t seem to find the fast-forward button on democracy. It’s bizarre, to say the least.
The Australian ‘Communist’ Experiment
Now let’s jump across the globe to Australia. Specifically, to Victoria, a state that’s been under the iron grip of a government that many have described as “communist.” They’ve taken a page from Maricopa County’s book—or perhaps, both are playing out of the same playbook.
Victoria’s local government elections are wrapping up on the 25th of the month, but results won’t be known for two weeks. For local elections! We’re not talking about millions of votes. These are simple, straightforward local elections. It begs the question: What exactly are they doing during that extra time? Counting votes or conjuring results?
Suspicious Patterns
This isn’t an isolated incident. Across the world, delays in election results are becoming increasingly common. What used to be a straightforward process now feels like something out of a Kafka novel. It starts with delays, followed by murmurs of “ballots found” days after voting. By the time results roll in, the public’s confidence has already eroded.
Are these delays just a failure of logistics? Or is something more sinister at play? When countries that pride themselves on their electoral systems take days, if not weeks, to announce results, suspicion naturally arises. What happened to transparency?
The Broken System
The longer it takes to count votes, the more doubts it casts on the entire system. The public is asked to trust officials, but trust wears thin with each unexplained delay. What once was the bedrock of democracy is now mired in suspicion and confusion.
Why does it feel like the system is broken? Because it is. What used to be an efficient process has devolved into a labyrinthine mess, with more questions than answers.
Where Do We Go From Here?
The world watches as election results trickle in, long after the voting has ended. Maricopa County and Victoria are just the latest examples. The system may not just be broken—it might be intentionally stalled. And that’s what’s truly bizarre.