Valley City Times-Record

ND Matters: Are We Fed Up With Democracy?

- Lloyd Omdahl is a former North Dakota lieutenant governor and University of North Dakota political science professor. His column appears Tuesdays.

A small band of North Dakota right-wingers have brought back their proposal to restrict voting as an amendment to the state constituti­on. This is the second attempt for them but it is no better than the first one.

Will 32,000 North Dakotans be gullible enough to sign their petition to get the measure on the ballot? While the right to propose constituti­onal amendments belongs to the people, the cost of educating the public about the hazards of the proposal will require thousands of dollars, wasted because we’ve been down this road before.

Stopping Citizens

On the other side is the North Dakota legislatur­e that has put a measure on the 2024 November ballot to make amendments to the constituti­on by citizens impossible. Amendments proposed by citizens would have to gain approval in two consecutiv­e elections instead of just one as now.

The double approval would not apply to constituti­onal amendments proposed by the legislatur­e, making it obvious that the legislatur­e wanted to curb constituti­onalism amendments by citizen petitions and hog the constituti­on for itself.

Because the citizenry eventually gets wise to maneuvers by interest groups and the legislatur­e, both measures will fail. Why would any North Dakota citizen would want to give up initiative rights they have had for over 100 years? They won’t.

Measures Will Fail

Attempts to restrict voting are rampant across America. Until now, we have held that every human being in the United States is qualified to vote for being a human being – a civic manifestat­ion of the dignity and sanctity of humanhood.

But a recent sweeping survey of the public attitude by PEW Research says we are no longer happy but hope for something else. It sounds like anything else.

In this land of milk and honey, according to PEW only 4% of the people think the political system is working well.

Down With Parties

PEW found that positive views of government­al and political institutio­ns are at historic lows, with just 16% saying they trust the federal government­s most of the time. And a growing share of the public dislikes political parties.

According to PEW, 63% are dissatisfi­ed with the candidates running. For good measure, majorities in the study favor term limits for Congress, abolishing the electoral college, and putting age limits on federal officehold­ers. Fifty-five per cent are angry.

As far as citizens are concerned, money has corrupted the system, especially since the Supreme

Court ruled that corporatio­ns were persons that could pour money into politics.

While people may express this negative views about the system, when push comes to shove, they are not in the fray. Multi-Party Worse They don’t like the 2-party system but a multi-party system would be worse; they don’t trust the government but those Social Security checks are always on time; is it the old people or the middleaged in Congress that bog the process down?

North Dakota voters just approved term limits so it is too early to measure the consequenc­es. The present legislatur­e brought that on themselves – it has been crossways with public opinion on a number of key issues.

There is presently a campaign to circumvent the Constituti­on to dump the electoral college. This has been a pervasive issue. You should know right off the bat North Dakota that would oppose junking the electoral college because it gives us more than our share of influence in electing a president.

On a per capita basis, North Dakotans have at least three times it’s share, compared to California and New York.

When the chips are down we are not as ready to make changes as we are to propose them. Democracy is still the best form of government even though it is a constant mess that needs repair.

 ?? ?? Lloyd Omdahl
Lloyd Omdahl

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States