Accents of Europe
How to fight against electoral abstention?
Audio 7:30 p.m.
In front of a polling station in the Paris region, April 24, 2022, the day of the second round of the presidential election in France.
© RFI
By Frédérique Lebel
2 mins
The question deserves to be asked after a presidential election in France shunned by 28% of voters.
It is certainly still much better than during the last European elections in 2019 when barely more than one in two voters had moved.
Should we then have recourse to compulsory voting?
Advertisement
Belgium included it in the texts as early as 1893...
and even if the sanctions are extremely rare, the impact is clear.
The abstention rate is one of the lowest in Europe BUT it has not completely disappeared.
In Brussels, the explanations of
Pierre Benazet.
In Greece, the participation rate in national elections has been in constant decline
since the fall of the Colonels' regime and the return of democracy in 1974. 80% of voters went to the polls, at the beginning of the 1990s, they were no longer than 57% in the last national election of 2019. The fault is the crisis, the lack of confidence in the political class.
And yet voting in Greece has been compulsory for almost a century.
But this has a hard time translating into reality.
This is the report in Athens by Joël Bronner.
The fake Bulgarian compulsory vote
And if additional proof was needed that compulsory voting is not a panacea, head to Bulgaria.
Even for the legislative elections, the participation rate rarely exceeds 50%.
Tired of collapsing and reforming coalitions, of the corruption of the political class, voters are hardly motivated.
And it is not the law on the obligation to vote, which does not ultimately include any sanction that will convince them to move.
Explanations from Sofia, from our correspondent
Damian Vodenitcharov.
This is your Europe by Alice Rouja
And the question of the credibility of the political class, of course, depends on reliable information.
Which leads us to talk about
fake news
, in times of a pandemic, they have never been so present, so much so that we are talking about an infodemic.
It's your Europe, Alice Rouja.
And we start with false information about the war in Ukraine, which particularly affects young voters...
An anti-commercial gallery in Berlin
And we end our program with a detour, in the heart of Berlin.
Right next to Alexanderplatz.
This is where we find a strange shopping mall, or rather an anti-shopping mall.
It is installed, quite a symbol in a former administrative building of the former GDR.
Its name "the house of materialization", its goal: to defeat hyperconsumerism, by proposing to repair, recycle instead of buying and wasting.
This is the report by
Deborah Berlioz
Newsletter
Receive all the international news directly in your mailbox
I subscribe
Follow all the international news by downloading the RFI application
google-play-badge_EN
Presidential France 2022
France
Belgium
Greece
Bulgaria
infox
Ukraine
Germany
consumption
On the same subject
The debate of the day
Abstention, blank vote, invalid vote: is not taking them into account a denial of democracy?
Accents of Europe
Abstention: an issue for European democracies
The underside of the infox, the chronicle
Health professions: infox and distrust of the vaccination obligation