Editorial: Please, on March 3, go out to vote!

Traditionally, many people in the United States do not vote in March during the Primary Elections for the Presidency because they are not considered as important as the November Final Elections.

The truth is that these are even more significant than the Final Elections, since voters have the opportunity to choose their preferred candidate in each political party, and depending on the results of the primaries, their favorite candidate may or may not be ballot.

If you do not have a candidate of your choice, you are not required to choose the one indicated by another person. Your duty as a citizen is to educate yourself about who the candidates are and what they promise. Analyze if it makes sense what they offer since they have not been clear as to how they will pay for what they propose.

If even after listening to them for months, you have not made a decision, go to the polling station and give them your name. Almost as important as filling out the ballot is that your name is reflected in the voter registry. This is the opportunity for Spanish-speaking citizens to be told where it really counts: at the polls.

In Lawrence, it means nothing that we are the majority in numbers if we do not fulfill our obligation to vote.