HALIFAX (CUP) โ Megan Leslie says members of Parliament donโt waste their time on campus because people under 30 donโt vote โ and thereโs something wrong with this.
Leslie, the MP for Halifax, visited Dalhousie University on Oct. 19 to discuss how students can effectively engage MPs on pressing social issues. In the question and answer period, she began to discuss the problem with student engagement and why MPs may not seem to care about student issues.
โIโm not going to waste my time trying to get votes from people under 30 because people under 30 donโt vote,โ Leslie said. โMy campaign manager is going to tell me to stop going to Dalhousie campus because youโre wasting your time. You should go to seniorsโ homes.โ
She says itโs like the chicken and the egg dilemma โ which came first, young people disengaging with government, or elected officials giving up on people under 30.
โItโs hard. Iโve met with this incredible student activist here on this campus whoโs doing incredible things to mobilize this community on all kinds of issues, and so engaged. And he didnโt vote in the last election,โ she said.
โThereโs this strange thing happening at this moment in time where young people are disengaging in the political process because itโs alienating and because we arenโt represented.โ
โWe get away with that shit because no one is listening. The things that happen in the House of Commons would make your toes curl,โ she said.
Emily Smith van Beek, vice president of Dalhousieโs politics society, says sheโs upset with the statement from Leslie.
โI think itโs accurate that students donโt care or vote; however, itโs disappointing seeing Megan Leslie, member of the NDP, make a comment like that because their party represents really caring about students,โ she said.
โWeโre the future and the only way to get students engaged is to be a presence in their lives and because there will always be that one person that will become involved and influence other young people to do the same.โ
She says that our political structure will crumble if elected officials give up on people our age, arguing that itโs an MPโs responsibility to seek out students, not the other way around.
โI think that one voice can influence a lot of people and I think that change can be heard,โ said Smith van Beek.
โUniversity campuses are proof of mobilization and how word spreads, so MPs should take advantage of that and try harder to get students involved in order to influence political participation.โ
Despite her assessment of youth engagement, Leslie does want to see young people more involved with politics and doesnโt like the fact that MPs ignore people under 30.
โThere are five women under the age of 40 in the House of Commons and two men under the age of 30,โ she said. โThere should be some people in their 20s, because we pass bills on pension changes unanimously and we donโt talk about post-secondary education and unemployment. These issues are dead in the House of Commons.โ
She also says students should get more involved in order to get better representation.
โWe need to look at who weโre electing and who is running,โ she said.