2014 might see lowest voter turnout: Report

File Photo
File Photo
Image: MAKING A MARK:On the proclamation of the 2014 elections date by President Jacob Zuma, the IEC will publish the elections timetable which dates the processes, one of which is the cut-off date for the submission of candidates' lists. photo: Russell Roberts

The 2014 general elections could see the lowest voter turnout since democracy was established in 1994, the City Press reported on Sunday.

The newspaper reported that 46 percent of eligible voters were likely to not turn up at the polls.

This possibility was suggested both by the fact that 10 million eligible voters had not registered, and the IEC's expectation that only about 70 percent of those registered would actually take pen to ballot papers on Wednesday.

Twenty five million people are registered to vote next week.

A total of 42 percent of eligible voters skipped the elections in 2009.

A poll conducted last month by market research company Ipsos found that 42 percent of those who had not registered would have voted for the ANC, followed by eight percent who would have supported the DA and four percent who would have favoured the EFF.

Ipsos said most of the unregistered voters polled gave their reason for not taking part in the election as being because they felt their vote would make no difference.

The African National Congress spokesman Keith Khoza said the number of unregistered voters would not impact on support for the ANC.

"Those votes weren't ours in the first place," he said.

Economic Freedom Fighters spokesman Mbuyiseni Ndlozi said the Ipsos numbers were "wrong" as they suggested the majority of unregistered voters were youth.

"The express majority of those who have turned out to register are... between 18 and 34."

The Democratic Alliance's Gauteng premier candidate Mmusi Maimane said the unregistered voters could have "swung the vote".

"They should have been at the forefront of these elections," he told the City Press.

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