The one constant in this
issue is that no one likes the compromise, including legislators
rethinking earlier support. Why do it, then? We are fixing the wrong
problem, like a doctor who removes a facial mole to solve an itching
toe. The real solution, more people involved, does not automatically demand a system change.
Conservatives
fear the compromise for many reasons. Some of those pushing it were
Count My Vote advocates not long ago, so conservatives fear the two may
be "in bed together" to influence state politics. The system can be
skewed by party outsiders to manipulate party elections through a
process called controlled opposition--non-party members could load a
caucus, multiply candidates, vote for the weakest to split the vote and
take over.
Opponents take offense at Count My Vote's unethical methods, used to gather signatures so CMV can appear on the 2014 ballot as a citizens' initiative. Mounting solid evidence shows repeated deception at petition collection sites. This taints the entire process.
With the constitutional issues concerning state control of political parties, and with the implications of dishonesty in the citizens' initiative, court cases are inevitable; indeed, to not bring them would be irresponsible. If this issue moves forward, it will cost Utah taxpayers serious money in court before it is done.
There is an uncomfortable feeling about this entire issue of "hurry, hurry." Good politics are not borne of speed and ignorant voters. The business of a constitutional republic is deliberately slow, to prevent errors and promote education of the people, who are the source of law. Government by the people is based on their understanding of the topic at hand. That education hasn't happened.
There has been far too little open discussion on this topic. When rushed, a policy change should be viewed with suspicion. Good policies survive scrutiny and dialogue, while coercion seeks to suppress public dialogue.
This issue is going too fast and it would be better to slow it down. The patient is being rushed into surgery without a finished diagnosis or a qualified treatment. It's important that we do the right thing, not the fast thing. Let's back off this issue for another year and find answers to the real problems, rather than throwing out the caucuses because "somebody said" that will fix the patient. Ice the compromise, spank CMV and send them to time out for their dishonesty. Go to work on the real problem, keep the public informed and involved, and if changes really are necessary, get it right for the 2016 elections.
In the meantime, Utah, show up at the caucuses next week and solve the real problem. The caucuses are not flawless, but Winston Churchill's remarks on democracy also apply here: "The worst form of government except for all those others... ." Keep the caucuses. Show up next week and make a difference.
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