Weekly Opinion Editorial
CLOSED PRIMARIES ARE
FAIR!
by Steve Fair
There are
three types of political primary elections: open, closed and blanket(jungle). In an open primary, each voter, regardless of
Party affiliation, determines which Party’s primary they want to vote in. Republicans can vote in Democrat primaries
and Democrats can vote in Republican primaries.
In a closed primary, only voters registered in the Party can vote in the
Party primary. Republicans vote for
Republicans- Democrats vote for Democrats.
In the blanket/jungle primary, all candidates, regardless of Party
affiliation, are on the same ballot and all voters, regardless of Party
affiliation, vote on the same ballot.
Oklahoma Republicans
have a closed primary system. Oklahoma
Democrats have a semi-open primary. They
allow Independents, but not Republicans, to vote in their primary.
An Oklahoma
group plans to circulate an initiative petition to let voters decide if they want
to go to a blanket or jungle primary. Oklahoma
United claims the current system disenfranchises voters and by changing the
primary process elected officials would be accountable to all voters, not just
those in their Party.
Three observations:
First, open
primaries promote deceit. If GOP voters could
vote in the Democratic primary or visa versa, the temptation to use that vote
to pick the weakest general election opponent exists. That is playing with their vote. They don’t really support the candidate and
their stance on the issues. By voting for
the weakest candidate in the other Parties’ primary, they help their Party and
candidate. A person’s vote should be considered
sacred and shouldn’t be trifled with. Political
hacks may view voting as a simple numbers game and treat the vote in a causal
and frivolous way, but true patriots don’t play with their vote. We have enough chicanery in politics, without
open primaries.
Second,
blanket primaries promote confusion. The
Republican Party dominates voter affiliation in Oklahoma. Every statewide elected official is
Republican. All federal elected officials
are Republican. Republicans hold super
majorities in both chambers of the legislature.
The likely result of a blanket/jungle primary would be two Republicans running
against each other in the general election.
The major difference in the jungle and a closed primary is the more
liberal, middle of the road Republican would prevail, resulting in a less
conservative Oklahoma government. Because the voting pool would include
liberals, the more liberal of the Republicans would win. The only people not confused by the
blanket/jungle primary are the liberals.
Their goal is to wrest control from conservatives in the state and a blanket
primary is just a tool to get that done.
Third,
closed primaries are fair. It’s not
unfair to exclude those unwilling to align/join/position with an organization
to not have a voice in how the organization makes decisions. Churches don’t allow non-members to vote on
their clergy. Civic clubs don’t let
non-members vote in elections for their officers. No one considers that unfair, because it isn’t. If a voter wants to vote in the Republican
primary, register Republican. It’s that
simple.
Why would a
political Party want those who are not outside their Party help select their
nominee? Because they are losing
elections! For decades, Democrats in
Oklahoma held closed primaries and it wasn’t an issue, because they dominated
elections and Oklahoma government for over a century. That view changed when Oklahoma voters aligned
with their values and changed their Party affiliation and Republicans started
winning.
A closed primary allows each political Party to determine their own nominee, not outsiders, and the nominees meet in the general. A closed primary is logical, rational, and sensible. Out of state liberals are expected to pour millions into the initiative petition process to get it on the ballot. Republicans- don’t sign it! It wouldn’t unite Oklahoma, it would divide.
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