Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

GOP can’t quite close door

- John Brummett John Brummett, whose column appears regularly in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, is a member of the Arkansas Writers’ Hall of Fame. Email him at jbrummett@arkansason­line.com. Read his @johnbrumme­tt Twitter feed.

The state Republican Committee narrowly failed on Saturday to pass a measure calling for only card-carrying Republican­s to pick all officehold­ers in the state except in Pulaski, Washington and a few Delta counties.

The required suspension of rules to take up the matter necessitat­ed a two-thirds majority vote that was not quite achieved. There was talk of the party committee bringing the issue back next time after more study or of going straight to the Legislatur­e, meaning largely to itself but with direct lawmaking authority.

Closed primaries are not uncommon among states. It’s not unreasonab­le for a political party to want to be in charge of its own nomination­s, spared infiltrati­on by someone like me—a cussed independen­t and left-leaner— asking for and getting an “R” ballot.

I did that in May and marked the ballot for Doc Washburn over Sarah Sanders for governor.

I calculated that no vote could be nobler than against Sanders. I figured Washburn was sincere in zany extremism rather than cynically tactical. In a choice between an actual nut and a pretend nut for my next governor—and the next governor would only come from the Republican primary—I chose authentici­ty as my tiebreaker.

Most of the Republican objections voiced Saturday to open primaries had nothing to do with outsiders who come in to vote against the least-authentic deplorable. Instead it was about supposed liberals venturing into the GOP primary to vote for what these Republican­s called the most liberal choice, but which actually was the least-extreme conservati­ve.

That’s actually one of the major goals of Republican-resigned Jim Hendren with his new Common Ground organizati­on. The group encourages voting in the Republican primary when it’s tantamount to election, but for the most center-inclined, bipartisan and problem-solving candidate.

That tactic appeared to bear no fruit in the recent primary. But many Republican­s want to stomp the notion flat anyway.

Most states that have party primaries restricted to registered members offer vibrant competitio­n between those parties. They also tend to have independen­ts who have made decisions to register as independen­ts knowing they are forgoing voting in either party primary.

Arkansas is not like that or anyone else.

For decades it had open primaries that Democrats so controlled that their nomination­s were accepted as tantamount to election.

But “Democrats” in those days were merely nominal and not organized in any partisan way. Democratic primary voters were independen­ts.

One time the Democrats elected as their state party chairman a young fellow who promptly revealed that of course he had voted for Nixon over McGovern. He’d vote for a “D” locally, because everyone did, but president of the United States was important. Do you mean to say he couldn’t be state Democratic chairman if he wasn’t really a Democrat? Why, who ever heard of such a communist notion?

Now Arkansas is overwhelmi­ngly Republican and its primaries are the ones tantamount to statewide election. But the people of the state now think more about parties. They are a little more than a third Republican, about a third independen­t, and less than a third Democratic.

Republican­s are winning big because the independen­t third is conservati­ve and leans heavily to it. But only about 7 percent of registered voters are actually registered as Republican­s. About 87 percent don’t register by party at all.

The point is that, if you want to have a say in selecting statewide officers, you must vote in the Republican primary, because the Democrat in November—any Democrat in November—won’t stand a chance.

The rule change many Republican­s are seeking would mean that only registered Republican­s could vote in their primaries. They think that would grow their registrati­on rolls but keep out the socalled RINOs, meaning Republican­s in Name Only, or people like me—if there are any—who are viewed as mischief-makers rather than as the authentici­ty-seekers they are.

It could happen that Republican registrati­on rolls would explode. But it also could happen that conservati­ve independen­ts in Arkansas so value their independen­ce that they would resent coercion, and would simply skip any primary of a group that tried to make them join it.

They might see the Republican behavior for what it is—arrogance and greed.

None of that should present any big problem for Republican­s. They’d still win everything either way. They would do so either with the voluntary coalition they already have or their own small clique, made more snug, smug and powerful than ever.

I can’t quite envision a conservati­ve independen­t in Arkansas getting so mad about being told he must join the Republican Party to vote in the primary in May that he would go out and vote for Joe Biden in November.

It’s a long time—and a lot of Fox and Newsmax viewing—from May to November.

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