Weekly Opinion Editorial
SQ#836 IS FLIM-FLAM!
by Steve Fair
On June 24th,
the Oklahoma Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a lawsuit filed by the
Oklahoma Republican Party challenging the constitutionality of SQ# 836. Justices did not immediately issue a
ruling. SQ#836 aims to change Oklahoma’s
primary election system from closed primaries to an open system. The OKGOP maintains SQ#836 violates the First
Amendment rights of association by forcing the Party to accept votes from those
not registered with the Party. They
contend political parties have the right to determine who participates in their
nomination process.
Proponents of SQ#836 were represented by
former U.S. Attorney Robert McCampbell.
He pointed out the US Supreme Court has ruled that a top-two primary
system does not violate political party associational rights. Three observations:
First, changing the primary election will
move Oklahoma to the left. The
motivation behind SQ#836 is because Democrats are losing at the ballot
box. D’s tried, with limited success, to
get their candidates to run as Republicans.
That made it difficult for primary voters to identify the sheep from the
goats. The Democrat’s next strategy is
to eliminate branding. They want to make
Party affiliation insignificant. They
want to blur and obscure a candidate’s values/positions so they can get more
progressives elected. SQ#836 is the springboard to a more liberal
state government. No true conservative
is supporting it.
Second, changing the primary election will
promote hijinks. SQ#836 would increase
the practice of candidates deceitfully positioning themselves as a conservative
to win an election. SQ#836 is a Trojan
house. Proponents are selling the fairness/harmless/beneficial
of it, but fail to disclose the hidden danger and malicious intent it actually
promotes. SQ#836 would encourage
candidates to practice deceit and chicanery.
It is already next to impossible to discern the genuine from the bogus
in the current system. Flipping to a
primary where those not registered in a Party can determine the Party’s nominee
is asinine.
Third, changing the primary election will
empower special interests. Proponents of SQ#836 trumpet how it will bring
fairness, equity, and honesty to the primary system. But what is fair about a system where those
who don’t want to be a part of an organization want to tell that organization
how to operate? SQ#836 would draw
special interest money like flies to sugar.
Mass marketing of empty suit light weights would put the power in the
hands of big donors. Trade associations
and industries are already buying legislative seats in Oklahoma. SQ#836 would take it to the next level.
SQ#836 isn’t about fairness. It’s about control. It’s about winning elections. Every registered voter in Oklahoma can already
participate in primary elections. They
just have to register with the Party that aligns with their values. That is just common sense. Outsiders shouldn’t pick a Party’s
nominee. SQ#836 is a scam promoted by
flim-flam artists. Unfortunately, some
of those bilkers have an ‘R’ by their name.
If the Oklahoma Supreme Court rules against the OKGOP, then SQ#836
advocates will start gathering signatures to get it on the ballot. They have to gather 173,000 statewide in a
short window. Oklahomans should decline,
reject, repudiate and spurn requests to put their John Hancock on the petition,
not matter how persuasive the solicitor.
SQ#836 is not OK.
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