SENATE DEBATE ORGANIZERS DO DISSERVICE TO VOTERS!
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
SENATE DEBATE ORGANIZERS DO DISSERVICE
TO VOTERS!
There are twenty-four candidates in the running for the open U.S.
Senate seat in Louisiana. A televised
debate has been set on the state’s public television network for October 18th,
to give Louisiana voters a chance to size up the candidates. But there will
only be five contenders in the debate. And the losers are the voters.
Louisiana is the only state in the nation to hold a convoluted open
primary, where all candidates run at the same time, regardless of party or
independent affiliation. There are no
party primaries. So the result has too
often allowed the extreme candidates on both the left and the right to get into
a run off.
Party primaries allow consensus candidates to emerge that better
reflect the views of a majority of voters.
Oh, but party primaries are obsolete, a number of good government groups
allege. If that’s the case, why is Louisiana the only state to adopt such a
system? I guess, like in so many other
areas of government reform, the Bayou State is just way ahead of the curve.
Yeah, right!
The statewide public television network, paid for by taxpayer
dollars, has allowed an outside private organization called the Council for a
Better Louisiana to pick and choose who will be allowed on the debate
stage. According to the Advocate, the CABL group “drew a line
and invited the candidates they deemed to be the most serous of the bunch.”
So we are to believe there are only five “serious candidates” with
the other 19 just tagging along for the ride.
When public tax dollars are involved, no private organization should
be calling the shots of who can make their case to voters and who will be left
out. If CABL or any other groups want to
hold a debate at their expense, so be it.
But allowing any private group to dictate who should be included when
taxpayer dollars are footing the bill is both wrong, and probably a violation
of the law.
In fact, a lawsuit was filed just this week by candidate and former
State Senator Troy Hebert alleging the unfairness and outright illegality of
allowing public funds to discriminate as to who is in and who is out of the
debate. In previous debates sponsored by
CABL, a candidate had to raise a minimum of $250,000, which seems to be a
reasonable amount. But now the group has
raised the total to one million dollars, which appears to be unreasonably
high. Remember that Donald Trump had not
raised anywhere close to this amount at the time of his first presidential
debate.
There are several candidates who, in the words of CABL, should not
be considered “serious.” Retired Air
Force Colonel Rob Maness, a Republican, garnered 15% of the statewide vote just
two years ago in his race for U.S. Senate that was won by current incumbent
Bill Cassidy. A former U.S. Congressman,
Joseph Cao, is in the mix and has a Washington perspective to offer. David
Duke, who has run as high as 12% in recent polls, more than twice the threshold
set by CABL, could certainly liven up the debate. Trump, in his early campaign efforts, was so
well known that he did not need to raise that much campaign cash. Duke is in
the same category with his name recognition, whether it’s positive or negative.
But regardless of the polling numbers or amount of campaign dollars
a candidate raises, it’s disturbing that a small group of businessmen (CABL)
can dictate who can be the beneficiary of taxpayers’ dollars. The Louisiana Pubic Broadcasting network, the
debate sponsor, is doing a public disservice by allowing such a process.
The legislature can do two things to vastly improve the
process. Get rid of the current “jungle
primary” system that has been rejected by every other state in the nation. And put tighter limits on how private
organizations can dictate how public agencies spend taxpayer dollars. The public deserves better than it is
receiving by current process.
*******
“The American people are
demanding more competitive and inclusive elections, not less.”
Former
Senator Joe Lieberman
Peace and Justice
Jim Brown
Jim Brown’s
syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout the
nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all his past columns and
see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com. You can also hear Jim’s
nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning from 9:00 am till 11:00 am
Central Time on the Genesis Radio Network, with a live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
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