Its Not My Party Mark writes in with concern that my condemnation of
Washingtons late blanket primary implies an endorsement of state-funding of
private elections. Marks point is well-taken; one interpretation of the
lamentations over the demise of the blanket primary is that since the public pays for
primary elections, the public ought to decide how theyre run.
Unfortunately for proponents of this argument, primaries are a sellers market,
and the parties form a cartel.
What do the parties get out of primary elections? The parties
have determined (correctly or not) that the polling data gained through
publically-funded primaries is worth the damage inflicted by non-registered voters
interfering with the nomination. If it werent for the polling
datathe "trial run"the parties would much prefer to handle
nominations internally, at party conventions where only active party members would
have a voice.
What do voters get out of primary elections? Well, under the
rules of yesterdays primary, Washington voters got to choose among candidates
for a single party, and (unlike in other states) they did so anonymously and they
can effortlessly change parties in the next election. Did you get your
moneys worth?
The bottom line regarding primary elections, in Washington and
elsewhere, is that they are indulgences voluntarily extended to the public by
the parties on the parties terms and subject to withdrawal at any time.
Washingtons blanket primary was a local anomaly that voters came to regard
as an entitlement, but the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution (and Article I
of the Washington Constitution, by the way) guarantees the right to freedom of
assembly, and that includes the freedom of parties to control how their candidates
get nominated.
A mature electorate would refuse to pay for primary elections
on the grounds that they are private affairs. For better or worse, we seem to
enjoy the conceit of participation too much to renounce it. As little as I
think of the blanket primary, it might seem surprising that I am encouraging
everyone to vote for Initiative 872,
which would establish a "top-two" primary in which the top two finishers,
regardless of party, would advance to the general election. I support
I-872 because I believe the parties when they threaten
to pull out of primary elections altogether if I-872 passes. (Wed 15 Sep 2004, 16.32 PDT) @ #