Weekly Opinion/Editorial
RECORD
NUMBER OF CANDIDATES FILE!
by Steve
Fair
Last week 794 candidates filed for state
and federal offices at the state Capitol.
That is the highest number since 2006, when 594 filed. Of the 101 state House members, only 15 were
unopposed. One half of the state Senate
is up for re-election(24 seats) and just four were re-elected without
opposition. Of the 19 legislative seats
that were unopposed, 14 were Democrats.
Many of the new candidates were from the
education field. Since teachers were at
the Capitol during the filing period, some threw down their $750 or $500(depending
on the office) without premeditation and cast their hat into the political
arena. The Oklahoma Democrat Party Chair
was excited about all the candidates, both at the legislative and statewide
level. Four years ago, three statewide
offices went uncontested by Democrats.
This year, Democrats didn’t file for the State Treasurer and State
Auditor positions.
Several legislative Republican incumbents
drew primary opponents after an organization called Oklahoma Taxpayers Unite! recruited
challengers to lawmakers who voted for the recent tax increases. Expect some upsets in the GOP primaries. Those incumbents face the challenge of convincing
fiscal conservative Rs they haven’t abandoned GOP principles when they voted
for the largest tax increase in Oklahoma history.
Ten Republican candidates filed for
Governor, six were expected. They join two
Democrats and three Libertarians for a total of fifteen seeking the state’s
chief executive position. All but one
are male. former State Senator Connie Johnson is running as a Democrat. In total, thirty two Republicans filed for
statewide elective office and only thirteen Democrats.
First, expect a runoff in the Republican
gubernatorial race. With ten candidates,
it is an almost a mathematical certainty no one candidate will get 50% plus one
vote in the June 26th primary.
If the four candidates who filed unexpectedly pull just 10% of the vote
combined, they will have a major impact on the race.
Second, spontaneous candidates seldom
win. That doesn’t mean they never win,
but success in politics requires planning and timely execution. While the Ds may field candidates, most of those who impulsively filed will not
be elected.
Third, Republican voters need to start
paying attention. The primary is Tuesday
June 26th- just seventy days/10 weeks away. With 32 statewide candidates, expect your
mailbox to start filling up with campaign propaganda. Every candidate will tell you what you want
to hear, but it is the responsibility of the voter to vet candidates. Most of the statewides will be at upcoming
events sponsored by your local GOP. Make
an effort to meet those candidates, ask them hard questions and determine if
they have the ability and the temperament to do the job.
Modern
politics has evolved into slick marketing and voter/consumer behavior
science. That has resulted in candidates
elected who can’t or won’t do what they claim they will. After they are elected, they ignore you
because they are obligated to the special interests that financed their
campaign. The only way to stop that
cycle is to show up and ask questions.
Until a groundswell of citizens start paying attention all the time and
not just 90 days every two years, Oklahomans will get the government they
deserve.
No comments:
Post a Comment