Budget war is proof Arizona’s primary elections need changing
The 2023 legislative session is already living down to low expectations.
Gov. Katie Hobbs unveiled the first budget of her tenure. That set of proposed priorities is enough to stagnate the entire process.
At least, that’s what House Appropriations Chair David Livingston seemed to declare when he said at the end of a legislative hearing that a plan for how to lay off state employees on July 1 would have to be discussed.
You read that right. Arizona is not in a recession. Budget belt-tightening doesn’t have to happen right now. But Republicans with a narrow majority have drawn a partisan line in the sand.
Lawmakers are tasked with only one responsibility — approve a budget for the next fiscal year and transmit it to the governor for his or her signature. The hope is for that to occur near the 100day mark.
But Rep. Livingston’s musings make it sound like we should simply forget about budget work being accomplished in the next five months. That’s nothing new, of course, with a system that serves party activists and loyalists.
A tiny percentage of the state’s electorate has been choosing the major parties’ general election nominees for decades. And on a regular basis, at least one of those nominees has proven to be so unpalatable that some voters choose what’s behind “door number one” – hoping for the best – or just leaving that part of the ballot blank.
A more open system that would allow all voters – including our growing number of independents – to pick whatever candidate they preferred regardless of party preference could have led to the “red wave” many pundits expected last
November.
But the nominees at the top of the GOP ticket preferred to focus on unproven claims about widespread election fraud in 2020. But that clearly went against what a majority of the state’s voters preferred.
Traditional conservatives such as gubernatorial candidate Karrin Taylor Robson would have focused a general election campaign on pledging to build on recent economic successes or exploring pragmatic solutions to our dramatic water challenges. Rather, a majority of independents and a not-insignificant number of Republicans were left unable to stomach fiery rhetoric that didn’t address real problems.
Because so many outcomes have essentially been decided in the primary, nearly one-third of registered voters are left without the ability to decide who will actually represent them.
Allowing independents to freely take part rather than requiring them to choose a Republican or Democratic ballot would be productive and groundbreaking.
If candidates faced true competition and had to address the concerns of a wider swath of voters, we probably wouldn’t have to hear from candidates who, despite what they say over the months of campaigning, won’t be able to complete the one actual requirement of their job, after all.
Rather, there would be healthy arguing about what direction Arizona should go and how to accomplish great things. Those arguments would be taking place throughout an election year and beyond, instead of just when it’s practical for victors of partisan primaries to run to the center ... expecting voters to not only have short memories but to accept a broken system that rarely offers exceptional choices.