Oregon Ballot Measure 65 (2008)

From Ballotpedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Contents

Oregon Ballot Measure 65 (2008) is a citizen initiated state statute in Oregon that will appear on the November 4, 2008 ballot. It it passes, it will bring top two primary elections to voters, where all candidates for an office would compete against each other regardless of party, and the two candidates with the most votes would then advance to the general election[1] Hence, the initiative is also known as the "top two" initiative.[2]

This measure was defeated at the polls on November 4. See 2008 ballot measure election results.

2008 election results

These election results are based on the Oregon Elections Division as of Nov. 6, 2008.[3]

Ballot Measure 65
Yes or no Votes Percentage
Yes 537,168 34.06%
No 1,039,786 65.94%
Total votes 1,576,954 100%

Current system and 65's proposals

Prior to 1904, Oregon voters relied on party conventions to nominate their candidates. In 1904, the practice of casting ballots in primaries was instituted.[4]

The reform proposed in Measure 65 is not a Montana-style open primary, but what is known as a Top Two or Louisiana-style "Jungle" Primary.[5]

The statute would allow independent voters to vote in the primary elections for US Senator, US Representative, Governor, Secretary of State, State Treasurer, Attorney General, state Senator or state Representative, and any other local partisan office. It does not apply to presidential elections.

Supporters

The initiative was proposed by former Oregon Secretaries of State Phil Keisling, a Democrat, and Norma Paulus, a Republican.

Endorsers include former Governor John Kitzhaber, former Secretary of State Norma Paulus, State Senators Avel Gordly and Ben Westlund.

65 is also supported by Associated Oregon Industries, the Oregon Business Association and the Oregon Business Council.

Arguments in favor

Supporters of Measure 65 give these reasons for voting "yes":

  • It eliminates the fundamental unfairness of having primary elections that exclude non-affiliated voters, and members of minor parties.
  • One in four general election legislative races in 2006 were decided with a 70% or more majority.
  • The existing election system fails to produce competitive races, so the races are largely decided in primaries that exclude 25% of registered voters.
  • Leading proponent Keisling says, "Measure 65 speaks to the heart of an Oregon value. It is an independence of mind and spirit that wants us to vote for the best person and get the best person in office, regardless of party registration."

Background

This initiative's supporters tried unsuccessfully to put a similar measure on the ballot in 2006, and to pass another version through the state legislature in 2008.

Donors

Supporters of Measure 65 raised $390,329 through late October.[6]

Newspaper endorsements

The Willamette Week endorses 65, saying "we’re willing to give 65 a try because the current system is broken."[7]

See also: Endorsements of Oregon ballot measures.

Opposition

The Top Two Primary is opposed by the Democratic Party, Libertarian Party, Republican Party, and Pacific Green Party. It is also opposed by the state's four biggest unions, the AFL-CIO, SEIU, AFSCME and the Oregon Education Association.

Arguments against 65

  • Marc Siegel, spokesman for the Democratic Party of Oregon, said, "Open primary is a misnomer. It disqualifies participation more than it opens it".[8]
  • Dan Meek of the Independent Party of Oregon believes that Measure 65 will destroy minor parties in Oregon, reduce voter choices, confuse the ballots, encourage dirty politicking, prevent fair and democratic endorsements, and not elect moderate candidates anyway. [9]
  • The Pacific Green Party of Oregon believes that Measure 65 will relegate it to rarely appear in the General Election. They base this on Richard Winger's Ballot Access News, where it has been written that 1 in about 1400 previous races had a third party candidate appear in previous elections [10],[11]. Seth Woolley, Secretary of the Pacific Green Party, believes that the Top Two system works to encode the two-party system directly into the election system and cites the fact that Oregon still has Ranked Voting in its Constitution, as a better alternative [12].
  • Oregonians Against Unfair Elections has submitted ballot statements in opposition, including a joint statement against Measure 65 signed by co-chairs of most of the parties in Oregon, including the Democrats, Libertarians, Republicans, and Pacific Greens.

Donors against Measure 65

Opponents of Measure 65 raised $265,750 in opposition through late October. $100,000 of this was from the Oregon Education Association.[6],[13]

OEA implies Measure 65 backed by Sizemore

The Oregon Education Association is opposed to Measure 65. In late October, the group sent a mailing to its members that appears to assert that Measure 65 is associated with Bill Sizemore. Supporters of Measure 65 responded immediately, saying, "The ad, paid for by the OEA and brought to our attention by an outraged teacher, claims Bill Sizemore is the author and lead proponent of the Open Primary/Measure 65.... Linking us to Sizemore is blatantly false, cynical, and offensive. I can’t believe OEA’s political bosses are so afraid of losing power that they would knowingly lie and mislead their own members."[14],[15],[16]

Sen. Rick Metsger, D-Welches, said, "There are plenty of things the OEA could say that would be legitimate. They don't have to stoop to lying. How do you have any credibility if you have to win that way? It gets me down that we're stooping to the same things we decried in the Newt Gingrich era."[13]

External links

Basic information

Supporters

Opponents

References

  1. "Open Primaries in Oregon?" from BlueOregon.com
  2. OregonLive.com: "Two more initiatives qualify for Ore. ballot", The Oregonian, July 21, 2008
  3. Oregon Elections Division, 2008 Election Results
  4. Statesman-Journal, "Measure 65 would alter Oregon's primary election system significantly", October 16, 2008
  5. Pacific Green Party Secretary Seth Woolley's Blog Top Two is Not an Open Primary
  6. 6.0 6.1 Portland Business Journal, "Donors kick in $14 million for Oregon ballot initiatives", October 24, 2008
  7. Willamette Week, "Measure 65: Open Primaries; Vote Yes"
  8. "Independent's Way" from Willamette Week
  9. Dan Meek, Measure 65 will Destroy Minor Parties, Choices, Oregon Catalyst Website
  10. Ballot Access News
  11. Pacific Green Party Secretary Seth Woolley's Blog, Washington State Top Two Results
  12. Pacific Green Party Secretary Seth Woolley's Blog, Measure 65 Talking Points for OPB
  13. 13.0 13.1 Oregonian, "Dark Lords and Dark Politics"
  14. Willamette Week, "Keisling and Paulus Attack Teachers Union Mailer Tying Measure 65 to Sizemore", October 23, 2008
  15. The Oregonian, "The OEA shows its true colors"
  16. The Oregonian", "The OEA: Playing Guilt by Association?"

To connect to everything on Ballotpedia about Oregon and its ballot—laws, history, statewide ballot measures, ballot access, and more, visit:

Personal tools
Toolbox