Weekly Opinion Editorial
VET CANDIDATES!
by Steve Fair
Filing for political
offices ended on Friday in Oklahoma.
During the three-day filing period, 285 people filed for the
legislature, U.S. House and the open Corporation Commission seat. This was the lowest number of candidates to
file for office in the Sooner state since 2012, when 275 filed. Three Republicans threw their hat into the
ring for the open Corporation Commission seat Bob Anthony has held for 36
years. The GOP nominee will face a
Democrat and Libertarian nominee in the November general election. That race is the sole statewide race on the
2024 ballot.
Six incumbent
Republican state senators filed unopposed.
There are twenty-six (26) senate districts up for election in 2024. Forty-two (42) incumbent state representatives
filed unopposed. Over 40% of the 127
legislative seats up for election in 2024 will have no race. Either lawmakers are doing a bang-up job or no
one wants the job. The truth is voters
are apathic about politics. Most have
little idea what is going on in their local and state government.
There are
four county elective offices up for election in all 77 counties this cycle:
Sherriff, County District #2, County Clerk, and County Court Clerk. The vast majority of incumbents in those races
filed unopposed. Three observations:
First, unopposed
incumbents should not equate not having an opponent with stellar
performance. The truth is the vast
majority of the voting public have little idea what their elected officials’
duties are. Before a politico starts
slapping themselves on the back, they need to acknowledge their uncontested race
could be that no one wants the job.
Second, it
is the voter’s job to vet candidates. This
year has attracted a large number of novice candidates In ‘open’ seats (no
incumbent). These newcomers know little
to nothing about the issues or the duties of the office they are seeking. They were recruited by a special interest
group trying to buy a seat or a political consultant looking to make a
buck. If the neophyte happens to be
elected, they will be trained to do the bidding of those who funded the
campaign. Beware of first-time candidates
who have never shown interest in politics, but last week rolled out of bed and filed
for office. Be wary of candidates who have
a history of not being a faithful voter.
Voters shouldn’t elect people who have little to no respect for the privilege
of voting. Those candidates may be
marketable/electable, but voters can ill afford to train someone on the job.
Third, elected
officials should be servant leaders. In Exodus
18:21, Moses’ father-in-law advises him to seek out servant leaders with four
attributes: (1) competence (2) fear God, (3) trustworthy/honest, and (4) not
covetous. In other words, people of
action and those with a track record, not those who are self-promoting narcissists
seeking office to be somebody, not to do something.
Sorting
through the campaign propaganda is a challenge.
Every candidate says they have the four characteristics described, but
few possess them. Oklahoma requires
candidates report campaign contributions to the Ethics Commission. Who is donating to a candidate provides
insight as to where their allegiance lies.
Ask candidates tough questions, and don’t give them the answer you want
to hear when asking the question. Don’t
allow them to speak in generalities. Make
them be specific on their position.
Campaign signs are already out. Soon mailboxes will be full with slick printed brochures. Facebook posts will abound with candidate boasting. Oklahoma voters should be diligent and vet the candidates in every race. Send the hirelings, lackadaisical voters and novices back home to a real job. We deserve better. The primary is June 18th.
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