Instituting open non-partisan blanket primaries along with ranked choice
/ instant runoff voting in the general election, reforms that draw candidates
and political parties closer to the median voter could actually help the
political parties’ financial bottom line.
In an article earlier this year for Politico,
Byron Tau analyzed the increasing impact of Super PAC’s on the ability
of state political party organizations to raise money and hence control the
candidate selection process. The two major political parties in Nevada are
experiencing this trend. Review of the state, Clark County, and Washoe County
Republican and Democratic Party’s contribution
and expense reports available on the Secretary of State’s website bear
this out. Could Super PAC’s actually help efforts to reform state and local
elections?
As Tau points out, fund raising and reporting rules favoring Super
PAC’s are draining state party coffers. This lack of cash diminishes the
control state parties have over issues and candidate selection. Outside special
interest organizations, focused on maintaining the rhetoric on national issues
are dictating many an election agenda.
If allowed to continue, the Republican and Democratic parties at the
state level could join the dinosaurs as extinct. How much outside influence
will voters and state party leaders tolerate before they realize there is a way
to fight back?
By supporting efforts to implement open non-partisan blanket primaries and
ranked choice / instant runoff voting in the general election as proposed in the
Nevada Election Modernization and Reform Act (NEMRA), local political leaders
can reclaim the influence they are losing to these national interests. Party
members who have given up their party registration could return, new members
could register, bringing their money with them. In a primary election where the
top three vote getters advance to the general election as provided for in NEMRA,
shouldn’t a candidate focused on local and state issues and backed by local and
state interests defeat a candidate selected or endorsed by an outside special
interest group? Could this have been one of the reasons Democrats did not field
a viable candidate for governor or representative for the 2nd
Congressional District for this year’s election? If no local party candidate
showed promise, state party leaders willing to think out of the box could
endorse an independent candidate sharing many of their goals and objectives. In
a general election that uses ranked choice / instant run-off voting again as
provided for in NEMRA, shouldn’t a candidate backed by local and state
organizations defeat a national special interest group’s candidate? In my
opinion, the answer to these questions is “yes”.
Many times, actions have unintended consequences or results. Perhaps
the elimination of state political party organizations was one not anticipated
by Super PAC’s. I’d wager that aiding the effort to reform the election process
refocusing the discussion back to the majority of voters, reestablishing the
importance of state and local political parties, and returning the focus back
to state and local issues and solutions was definitely not considered.
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