Politics & Government
With Quiet Races Tuesday, Will Homewood Voters Head To The Polls?
Low voter turnout is expected Tuesday, and with the H-F board as the only hot race on the ballot, will Homewood voters head to the polls?
HOMEWOOD, IL — Homewood's hottest race this year is for H-F high school board race, although four trustee seats are up for quietly grabs. Will you head to the ballot box Tuesday or shrug your shoulders and walk away?
Voter turnout across the region is on track to hit near-record lows, county clerks are saying, much like what happened in Chicago's February mayoral challenge. It's not just a local issue — the United States trails other developed countries in the number of people who cast ballots on election day. In the 2016 presidential election, only about 56% of Americans voted. The Illinois record mirrors those patterns.
Maybe you don't vote because you're satisfied with how things are going in Homewood. Maybe you're not, but believe your vote will have no impact on the races.
Find out what's happening in Homewood-Flossmoorfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Or — maybe — you're just busy. You wouldn't be alone.
"American are human beings and human beings aren't all that interested in politics in general —they're busy thinking about their car problems, their family, their boss is an [expletive] and all the things that are regular, basic, time-consuming things," said Christopher Mooney, a political science professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago."Then all of a sudden, this election thing pops up and it just doesn't matter that much when you have to get your kid to school on time and make it to work today and so forth."
Find out what's happening in Homewood-Flossmoorfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Homewood residents will be voting for four village trustee seats, two library trustee seats (there is another open position with no candidates) and four seats for School District 153's board. They'll also be choosing four H-F High School District 233 seats from among 10 candidates — the hottest race in town.
Voting advocates argue that people should go to the ballot box to choose candidates who take action they support and to participate in and support a vibrant democracy.
The numbers, however, show that voters are choosing to stay home.
In 2015, the last time these seats were up for grabs, 10% of registered voters came out to elect a clerk and trustees to office. None of the races were contested.

In 2017, Richard Hofeld snapped up the mayor's seat with about 20% of voters supporting him. He ran unopposed, as did Marilyn Thomas in another bid for clerk. Three trustees edged out two opponents, one a write-in candidate.

Unlike in nearby Oak Forest, where no major race is contested, Homewood voters have a few options. That could prove to be a good thing as the village looks to keep taxes affordable while maintaining the quality of life it promises.
When there are no challenged candidates, it's hard to tell what impact single-candidate races have on communities, in part because each town or village has unique needs, Mooney and other political scientists said. Homewood, for example, prides itself for its stellar schools, particularly H-F high school, so the right board could make all the difference.
The bigger questions, Mooney said, are why some elections offer voters only one candidate and what that means for a democracy.
"It's not such a bad thing for democracy if the assumption is that we're satisfied, and when we're not, another official will run," he said.
"But if the reason nobody is running is because of an entrenched, elite polity with concentrated resources, then, yes, that is a problem because it is restraining the choices for leadership."
But in cases where there are contested races, candidates tend to spend more and get their messages out more and it creates a cycle where voters start to take notice and think maybe their vote will count, Mooney said. People will vote when they believe their action will affect outcomes.
But the questions remains: Will they let daily routines and worries keep them in or will they go out Tuesday and vote?
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