http://www.sacbee.com/2012/08/04/4691217/top-two-primary-hurt-competition.html

Viewpoints: Top-two primary hurt competition in the Golden State
By Steven Hill
Special to The Bee
Published: Saturday, Aug. 4, 2012 - 12:00 am | Page 9A

  In early June, California held an election featuring the first-time  
use of the top-two primary and legislative districts redrawn by an  
independent commission. Both of these reforms have been touted  
nationwide as ones that could help elect more moderates, decrease  
legislative polarization and increase competition and voter choice.

Yet a recent analysis by Fairvote of election results from the June 5  
primary shows these reforms failed to live up to the hype. Even worse,  
the top-two primary turned many legislative races into a crapshoot  
that has led to undemocratic results.

Consider Congressional District 31. This district is a liberal-leaning  
district where Democrats have a voter registration edge over  
Republicans, 41 percent to 36 percent. It is highly diverse, with  
Latinos a near-majority – 49 percent – and whites less than 30 percent  
of the district.

Yet the "crapshoot primary" resulted in two white Republican  
candidates finishing in the top two with low vote percentages, and  
thereby making the November runoff. Fatally, the Democrats ran too  
many candidates – four Democrats split the liberal vote against two  
GOP candidates, and the lead Democrat missed the runoff by fewer than  
1,500 votes. Forget Ralph Nader – the Democratic candidates all  
spoiled each other.

In Congressional District 8, a solid conservative district around  
Bakersfield, six Republican candidates badly split the conservative  
vote, resulting in the top two candidates each having 15 percent of  
the vote, only a couple of hundred votes ahead of the third-place  
finisher.

Or how about California's 51st U.S. House District in San Diego? A  
strongly Democrat district, the lead candidate, a Democratic state  
senator, spent nearly $50,000 in support of a penniless Republican  
opponent to prevent his strongest rival, a fellow Democrat, from  
making the November election. The ruse worked, and now the Democrat  
will soundly trounce his Republican opponent in the runoff.

This is just a sample of the manipulations and strategies that are  
being deployed to game the crapshoot primary. In a number of these  
races, if fewer candidates had run, the results would have been  
different. It's a roll of the dice to see who survives. Political  
party leaders will quickly figure this out and begin discouraging  
candidates from running to avoid splitting their parties' vote.  
Political machines will gain even more influence. Such arbitrariness  
and perverse incentives undermine the legitimacy of the system.

But while the crapshoot primary turned some races into dice rolls, the  
vast majority of races looked the same as under the old system: no  
competition at all. Democratic incumbents like Nancy Pelosi and  
Barbara Lee and GOP incumbents like Darrell Issa and Dana Rohrabacher  
all finished so far ahead that there's no doubt who will win in  
November. Most California races at federal and state levels still had  
no meaningful choices and no competition.

In some of these races, the primary resulted in two candidates from  
the same party finishing one-two and facing each other in a November  
runoff. In those races – 28 of the 153 seats at federal and state  
levels – the narrow choice for voters will be to pick which flavor of  
Democrat or Republican to elect. Minor parties, long an integral part  
of California's political tradition, have been wiped off the November  
ballot. So the primary actually has reduced voter choice, not expanded  
it as proponents had promised.

In the face of these peculiar results, top-two advocates have mounted  
a media campaign to defend it. Dan Schnur of USC's Jesse Unruh  
Institute of Politics claims that two candidates from the same party  
running against each other in the November runoff will "push  
candidates to the middle" in an effort to attract voters "from the  
other party as well as their own."

Besides sounding like a formula for political mush, the top-two is  
highly unlikely to change how a legislator acts once elected. That's  
because most of these same-party runoffs fall in districts that are  
safe, one-party fiefdoms. Sure, Democratic Congressman Howard Berman  
is angling for the GOP vote in his district to beat his November  
opponent, Democratic Congressman Brad Sherman. But is the liberal  
Berman going to change his spots once in office? Hardly, since he  
wants to be re-elected in a district where Democrats have a 22  
percentage point voter registration edge over Republicans.

As a Californian, I supported a redistricting commission because it is  
common sense to take the line-drawing out of the hands of the  
incumbents. But these two reforms were oversold by well-meaning  
advocates, and the inherent defects of the reforms were ignored.

The June primary, which had historically low voter turnout – less than  
30 percent, the lowest in California's history for a presidential  
primary year – should be a wake-up call. California badly needs  
political reform, but the Golden State has been ignoring more  
promising possibilities.

Proportional representation would result in true multiparty democracy  
and representation across the spectrum, including moderates. Ranked  
choice voting, which gives voters a first, second and third ranking,  
would prevent the weird vote-splits created by the crapshoot primary  
and create incentives for broad coalitions. Public financing and free  
media time for campaigns would help counteract the boost that big  
donors received after the U.S. Supreme Court's Citizens United decision.

It's time for Californians to get serious about enacting the types of  
political reforms that will reduce polarization, give voters more  
choice and elect candidates across the political spectrum.


Steven Hill is the former director of the Political Reform Program of  
the New America Foundation. His web site with additional writings is  
here http://www.steven-hill.com/





[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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