The rare reform that works as intended...

http://cafwd.org/reporting/entry-new/voters-want-choices-in-every-election-californias-top-two

Voters want the choice Top Two provides
05/29/2018 by Jim Mayer

(Photo Credit: AmandaY/Flickr)

Let’s be perfectly clear about how California adopted the Top Two primary 
system: Voters approved it.

And it won a majority vote in every county but two – Tulare and Orange.

Voters want the freedom to choose. In this case, a majority of voters want to 
choose from among all of the candidates because they increasingly don’t agree 
with one party or the other – much less all of the candidates within just one 
of those parties.

Without that choice, power shifts even more from the people to interest groups 
and to the parties themselves. In a so-called “closed primary,” the most noble 
politicians must worry more about “their base” than all of the voters in their 
district – never mind those who can’t or simply don’t vote, the young, the 
newcomers, the dispossessed.

A Top Two or open primary flips the power switch, which is what makes party 
leaders and their biggest backers uncomfortable. It is why even before the June 
primary election they are spinning excuses for not winning, for not even coming 
in second so they have a candidate in the November general election.

In this high season of campaign lies, here are some true facts:

California voters first enacted open primaries in 1996, when nearly 60 percent 
of voters approved Proposition 198, demanding more choices at the ballot. A 
major political party disagreed with a majority of the voters. The party 
challenged the measure on the grounds that the party’s freedom to association 
trumped the voters’ freedom to choose. The party won.

In the years that followed, as America became more partisan, California’s 
Legislature became hyper-partisan. Gerrymandered districts and closed primaries 
largely predetermined which party would win individual Assembly and Senate 
districts, which meant the election that really mattered was the primary.

The surest path to victory was to be the most liberal Democrat in a blue 
district and the most conservative Republican in a red one. The general 
election was more of an anointing. This was a system designed by the parties 
and for the ideologically pure.

Many factors contributed to California’s downfall in the early 2000s, but 
partisan gridlock in the capitol compounded everything, from budget-busting 
recessions to self-induced blackouts. If a Republican voted for a tax increase 
or a Democrat bucked a public employee union, they were assured to be 
“primaried,” taken out by their own party before all of the voters even got a 
say.

Senator Abel Maldonado experienced this dynamic as a candidate and an 
incumbent. He is among scores of politicians who understood the distortions of 
election law were frustrating the ability of reasonable people from different 
perspectives to find common ground.

As a lawmaker willing to compromise, he struck a deal in 2009. For his 
Republican vote on a late state budget, the Legislature agreed to give voters 
another chance to approve a new version of the open primary that had been 
affirmed as constitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court.

If Maldonado had not struck that deal, reform groups would have funded a 
citizens’ initiative. The Independent Voter Project had already done the legal 
work. Maldonado could have traded his vote for a cushy state job or a judgeship 
– the typical ransom. Instead he asked that voters be given a choice to 
increase their choices.

Maldonado didn’t force the change. He forced a vote. The change didn’t happen 
in the middle of the night; it happened on Election Day in 2010.

California Forward’s experienced and bipartisan Leadership Council in 2008 
identified open primaries as one of several political reforms that would 
contribute to the incremental and necessary process of shifting power back to 
the people. Analysis conducted for CA Fwd documented the potential for 
improving voter engagement and policymaking.

Along with citizens redistricting (Proposition 11 of 2008) and term limit 
reform (Proposition 28 of 2012), top two primary is having a positive effect on 
many candidates and incumbents. It is both difficult and unnecessary to parse 
the credit among the reforms.

All candidates are now aware of the need to – and the potential benefits of – 
talking to more than just their base voters. They have a larger incentive to 
listen to the growing plurality of voters who are not affiliated with either 
party – particularly millennials who are inheriting excuses and want solutions.

Candidates now have a path to victory – still narrow in too many districts – to 
being elected without having to swear allegiance to extreme partisan positions 
and interest groups. Often times these members are referred to as moderate, but 
that is simply not the point, and often wrong.

They are usually just as passionate and just as principled. But because they 
are accountable to all voters, they also are empowered to negotiate with party 
leaders on the priorities in their districts, even if those are not the 
priorities of the party leaders and the biggest donors.

These reforms have not dramatically changed the dynamics in all 120 Senate and 
Assembly districts. But they are encouraging enough lawmakers to listen more 
carefully to more voters and to speak up for the less powerful – which is what 
Californians voted for not once, but twice.

The Top Two primary is not perfect, but it is better than a closed primary. The 
best electoral process is one that evolves toward the public interest.

Democracy depends on freedom and freedom depends on democracy. As you exercise 
your freedom to choose in this primary election, be watchful for those who 
would limit your choices.

Jim Mayer is president and CEO of California Forward.

Categories: Democracy, Elections, Top Two Primary, Elections

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