Who we're endorsing: All our picks on your 2023 ballot
Politics once again has become more central to the lives of most Americans, as we spar over the direction of the nation, the fate of our democracy, and the consequences of conflicts in the Middle East and elsewhere. Every cultural issue now has a partisan undertow. Party differences are starker. Swaying the growing block of voters not aligned with either major party is key to moderation and a bipartisan approach.
As a result, voter participation is increasing in state and national elections but when it comes to local elections — such as the one currently underway — turnout is usually significantly lower. The estimates are that this year only 23% to 30% of the approximately 2 million enrolled voters in both counties will cast a ballot.
The drop-off is regrettable. Many of the challenges facing Long Island and the quality of life here will be influenced by the election underway. The combined population of Nassau and Suffolk counties is 2.9 million. If the entire Island were considered a city, it would be third-largest in the nation.
But Long Island is the land of many local governments causing understandable confusion about the services and jurisdiction of each one. Each person elected could have an impact on the local effects of rising sea levels, water quality and solid waste removal, county spending and taxes, services, economic development, affordability of new housing, road safety, policing, and destructive drug addiction.
In 1965, another era of turmoil and unrest, Newsday's editorial board addressed the paramount duty to vote: “The exercise of this right is one of the greatest American privileges,” the board wrote. “Good government requires that you cast your ballot.”
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Endorsements are determined solely by the Newsday editorial board, a team of opinion journalists focused on issues of public policy and governance. Newsday’s news division has no role in this process.

