Source
Our opinion
Berlin, 31. 7.
The German people are being called to the ballot box for the fourth time this year. Four elections within six months, four election campaigns with all their unpleasant side effects – it is understandable if some people express their aversion to everything that is directly or indirectly connected with the word parliamentarianism in the words: “Leave me alone with all this humbug, I won’t vote at all!” The number of people who think the same thing without saying it is in the hundreds of thousands. And if we add to this those lovely fellows who simply do not fulfill their duty to vote out of thoughtlessness, as if the whole thing did not concern them at all, then we have roughly described the group of people who make an inglorious appearance in the election statistics as the “party of non-voters.” An entity without organizational cohesion, fought and courted by all other parties at the same time. A “party” which, counting 7.75 million heads, was more prominent in the last Reichstag election on September 14, 1930 than the Hitler Party with its 6.38 million votes and 107 seats. 7.75 million votes, that is around 130 seats. Half that number would have been enough to give the political right a majority in the Reichstag two years ago. This does not apply to the left, because sadly it is a fact that cannot be denied that this “party of non-voters” is made up predominantly of bourgeois elements. But regardless of whether the non-voters sleep in the bourgeois camp or in the proletarian camp, they all have one thing in common: they are the ones who shout the loudest when decisions are then made in parliament which the non-voters feel no less than the outvoted minority. Those who do not fulfill their electoral duty have forfeited the right to complain afterwards when their wishes and protests go unheard. To repeat what was said yesterday, a few mandates can be the deciding factor in whether or not a right-wing majority is achieved. It will come about if each individual ensures that the “party of non-voters” emerges from the election battle as the smallest and most insignificant. This party must be defeated until it is annihilated!
Source of original German text: “Unsere Meinung,“ Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung, July 31, 1932.