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FROM ILLUSION TO ACTION: The case for the ballot
When we vote, we must commit not just to the act, but to the aftermath.
Analysis, Columns, Elections
Danielle S Archer  
August 31, 2025

FROM ILLUSION TO ACTION: The case for the ballot

In the widely beloved children’s book by Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland, a curious girl tumbles into a world where logic is warped, rules shift mid-sentence, and authority is wielded with whimsy and wrath. She’s told to obey without understanding, to follow paths that lead nowhere, and to accept nonsense as law. Sound familiar?

Our political landscape often mirrors this madness. Decisions are made by the few who speak loudest, spend deepest, and act most decisively. The rest of us — those who remain silent, cynical, or disengaged — have, in effect, relinquished control. Not because we lack intelligence or interest, but because we’ve been conditioned to believe our voice doesn’t matter, that voting is futile, and the system is too broken to fix.

Silence is not neutrality. Inaction is not innocence. And nothing is perfect. Perfection was never the prerequisite for participation. Voting is not just a civic duty, it is a declaration: I see the madness and I choose to make sense of it. It is how we reclaim the narrative, rewrite the rules, and remind those in power that legitimacy comes from the governed. It is how we move from spectatorship to stewardship.

Alice didn’t escape Wonderland by playing along. She questioned. She resisted. She stood tall. So must we. On September 3, 2025 we are called to do more than mark a ballot. We are called to refuse passivity. To reject the comfort of cynicism. To stand and be counted.

When we vote, we must commit not just to the act, but to the aftermath. To hold every elected official to account. To demand transparency, service, and justice not just in campaign season, but every day thereafter.

Jamaica’s progress depends on leadership that earns trust through service, not dominance. We must be vigilant against any form of governance that relies on fear, silence, or unchecked authority. Public office is a place of stewardship, not personal gain. Authority must never be mistaken for entitlement, nor influence used to pursue illicit wealth. True leadership is grounded in transparency, guided by justice, and accountable to the people it serves.

Veteran Member of Parliament (MP) Everald Warmington’s 2014 statement may have ruffled feathers, but it remains brutally instructive: “If you don’t vote, you don’t count. And you can’t ask for government benefits when you refuse to participate in the governance of your country.”

Agree or disagree with the tone, the truth behind MP Everald Warmington’s words is hard to ignore: “If you don’t vote, you don’t count.” When we opt out we are often left out. Decisions are made without us. Resources are allocated around us. And the future is shaped by those who show up — while we sit silent.

If, like me, you are guided by the teachings of our first National Hero Marcus Mosiah Garvey, then you will feel the weight and wisdom of his call: “Whatever you want in life, you must make up your mind to do it for yourself.”

We are not guests in this nation. Citizenship — whether by birth, descent, or naturalisation — confers full and rightful belonging.

We are out of many, not out of place. This land is not borrowed; it is inherited, defended, and ours to steward. Our stake in its future is not ceremonial — it is constitutional, moral, and irrevocable. We are its rightful owners. And ownership demands responsibility; not just in words, but in action.

Jamaica’s future will not be shaped by those who watch from the sidelines. It will be shaped by those who show up, speak out, and stand firm. Not just to cast a vote, but to defend the values that vote must stand for — integrity, justice, and service.

Danielle S Archer is an unapologetic Jamaican on a mission to make integrity the new normal in public life.

Danielle S Archer

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