In an earlier column,
I argued that abolition of the single party option (SPO, better known as the
so-called “master lever”) should fail, even though it’s good policy to abolish it. In it, I argue the
opposite for what I’d argued about five months
before: that regardless of
the benefit abolition would accrue for proponents, it should be eliminated as a
matter of good policy, and even as a matter of good politics for the establishment.
As Ken Block, the lead
advocate for the abolition points out, that makes me a hypocrite. Block also points that I’m
essentially advocating to keep voter confusion for the elderly, less educated
and black until such a time as a larger reform can be passed so a better system
can be created. Basically, even though we know the car of elections has a whole
host of issues, I’m suggesting we don’t fix this one part now.
I can’t deny that this
makes me hypocritical. The earlier post is right and the second post is wrong.
But that doesn’t comfort me much.
Because now we’re in a discussion about tactics for long-term change. Winning a battle isn’t winning the war, and if your war is for greater representation in our democracy, then the master lever is a not particularly important battle and it absorbed far too many resources and far too much time. It’s a sideshow campaign; we know that early voting increases turnout.
We know that first-past-the-post voting systems (where a candidate only needs a plurality to win) favor two-party systems with one or two exceptions in the world. And we know that Rhode Island’s electoral system is rigged (both presently and historically) to favor two parties, and usually the incumbent one at that. We also know that eliminating the master lever reduces the number of erroneously filled-out ballots. It’s not a sea-change issue.
It’s also an issue
that, unfortunately, encompasses Ken Block.
And due to his advocacy
it’s something that really can’t be divorced from him, and by extension, his
political party. That’s probably why it’s pretty much dead at this point.
Passing it would be a political win for the Moderate Party and they don’t even
have an elected politician.
The problem with Block is that he can’t recognize that his position as Moderate Party chair makes him a partisan (it’s literally is derived from a word for “defender of the party”). It means that everything he touches becomes tinged by politics. He says he’s a partisan “for non-ideologically based politics and governance” in which case he’s a partisan for unicorns.
Politics without ideology is politics without politics. There is no such thing as a non-ideologically driven political actor and for Block to profess to be such an actor makes him either a liar or a fool.
The problem with Block is that he can’t recognize that his position as Moderate Party chair makes him a partisan (it’s literally is derived from a word for “defender of the party”). It means that everything he touches becomes tinged by politics. He says he’s a partisan “for non-ideologically based politics and governance” in which case he’s a partisan for unicorns.
Politics without ideology is politics without politics. There is no such thing as a non-ideologically driven political actor and for Block to profess to be such an actor makes him either a liar or a fool.
Let’s get back to
tactics, because talking about Block reminds me of a good comment Jason Becker
made on Monday’s post; that it’s bad to throw out good policy because of the
messenger. Block isn’t really the issue, he’s the quintessential do-gooder who
does no good.
I’m not worried about what happens when the master lever issue ends. Will that be it? We’ll hold a celebration, everyone will slap each other on the backs for a job well-done and they’ll all go home. Elections solved! Democracy free and fair!
I’m not worried about what happens when the master lever issue ends. Will that be it? We’ll hold a celebration, everyone will slap each other on the backs for a job well-done and they’ll all go home. Elections solved! Democracy free and fair!
A few people will make
fewer mistakes. But the resources devoted to abolishing the master lever won’t
return to advocate for the next issues in improving our elections. Higher
turnout increases Democratic votes; so don’t expect the Moderates and
Republicans to join in on anything that would do that.
Campaign finance reform will help people who aren’t beholden to corporations or high-money players, so don’t expect businessmen concerned about “economic competitiveness” to start howling for that. This isn’t a bill in most of the advocates minds about helping the less educated, or elderly, or black. It’s a bill about breaking an institutional advantage for Democrats.
Campaign finance reform will help people who aren’t beholden to corporations or high-money players, so don’t expect businessmen concerned about “economic competitiveness” to start howling for that. This isn’t a bill in most of the advocates minds about helping the less educated, or elderly, or black. It’s a bill about breaking an institutional advantage for Democrats.
How do we know that?
Because let’s look at the events that preceded John Marion’s piece in RI
Future. The SPO abolition
camp had never pointed to the seven-year-old study Marion cited until the Monday
of the Boston Marathon. I applauded Marion for that piece at the time, because
it rescued the SPO issue from Block’s poor shepherding of it.
When faced with the
setback of the bill being held for further study, Block attacked Speaker Fox
and Sen. Harold Metts as needing the SPO to win their races. And it stunk of
politics. It reeked of political anger. Block had passed around erroneous
ballots, but it wasn’t clear what that meant, whether they’d been scratched on
purpose or whether they were the result of legitimate confusion. The problem
with anonymous voting systems is you can’t ask people what they meant to do.
Marion saved the
anti-SPO campaign from itself, in my view. I would never dream of speaking for
him, because Common Cause is in it for the long haul and wants good government
whether you’re Dem, GOP, Mod, Green, or Indy. Which is typical of anadvocacy organization. When Marion writes, it’s from a
place of deep expertise and understanding.
When I write, it’s
from a place of passion, and often speculation. I warn readers about that
pretty consistently. Push back, question me, etc. I enjoy the fight. I also
enjoy watching the Moderate Party, because I enjoy watching fringe political
movements. The Moderate Party is a fringe movement. It’s a fringe that claims
to be in the center. But frankly, so what? Every fringe claims to be
mainstream.
There’s only one person in the Moderate Party who matters; Ken Block. Why does he want to abolish the SPO? He’s been quite forthcoming about it; potential Moderate Party candidates won’t run if the master lever bogeyman is out there. How was this issue not politicized and ideological?
There’s only one person in the Moderate Party who matters; Ken Block. Why does he want to abolish the SPO? He’s been quite forthcoming about it; potential Moderate Party candidates won’t run if the master lever bogeyman is out there. How was this issue not politicized and ideological?
Block’s mismanaged the
master lever campaign. He made himself the face of it. And did he offer up a
win to politicians? No. He didn’t bother. He didn’t bother doing the political
part of politics. Contrast this with the marriage equality movement.
Not only did the marriage equality forces offer up a real threat in the form of primary and general election challenges to anti-equality politicians, but they also offered support and publicity for pro-equality politicians. Marriage equality played a long-term game, they fought, and when they faced a setback they came back with a vengeance. And it worked.
Not only did the marriage equality forces offer up a real threat in the form of primary and general election challenges to anti-equality politicians, but they also offered support and publicity for pro-equality politicians. Marriage equality played a long-term game, they fought, and when they faced a setback they came back with a vengeance. And it worked.
Can Block offer this
same combination of stick and carrot? No. He can’t even get more than a few
people to stand up for their political beliefs (their ideology) and actually
run. And he can’t offer politicians support, because none of them are
Moderates; nor does Rhode Island have a system of electoral fusion to allow
candidates to run under multiple party banners (another reform that could
help). Instead, he’s focused on a paternalistic shame campaign targeting the
House Speaker and Senate President. And the genuine mainstream responds to the
fringe the way it generally does, with a shrug.
Some days I agree with
Ken Block. I want SPO gone so more third parties can succeed. I want the
Moderate Party developed so we can actually see it in action. And then I see
what he does with any kind of press, and I hope he never has success because
the Moderate Party under his leadership will try to save our social safety
system by destroying it. That the Moderate Party in Rhode Island are just
re-branded Rockefeller Republicans.
F. Scott Fitzgerald
once wrote that “the test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold
two opposing ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to
function.” I would never profess to have a first-rate intelligence, but I can
hold two opposing ideas in my mind. And I’m still functioning. Hypocrisy.
Samuel G. Howard - A
native-born Rhode Islander, educated in Providence Public Schools, went to
college in North Carolina and a political junkie and pessimistic optimist.