Archive for the ‘Tea Party’ Category

Over 6,000 Have Participated in Election Integrity Trainings so Far: Tea Party Patriots’ Co-founder – The Epoch Times

The Tea Party Patriots, led by co-founder Jenny Beth Martin, after the 2020 presidential election began election improvement efforts and coordinated with other organizations to implement training programs to ensure a higher level of election integrity throughout the United States.

The goal of their training, which has had over 6,000 participants, is to have citizens exercising their legal rights under their state law to make sure that there is a check and balance on the election system, Martin told Epoch TVs Facts Matterduring a recent interview.

Their efforts are focused on Georgia, Arizona, Nevada, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Michiganthe states that had the most problems counting ballots during the 2020 elections. Certain counties in these states had questionable election processes during the presidential election and revealed gaps in election integrity.

The Tea Party Patriot election integrity training was developed by Cleta Mitchell, who is an attorney and the senior legal fellow at the Conservative Partnership Institute (CPI) and chairs the CPIs Election Integrity Network.

Martin said that the 2020 election taught conservatives that being a poll worker wasnt enough, so in response, the training includes, getting to know the people in your election board and showing up and watching the decisions that they are making before elections ever happen.

The organizations ultimate goal is to build a permanent election integrity infrastructure.

The training teaches participants how to improve local election infrastructure by researching the contracts and understanding the processes for election boards, understanding how absentee ballots work making sure theyre processed properly when theyre returned, understanding the election system, which includes the paper and also the computers and being present for logic and accuracy testing, said Martin.

She said that Georgia is well organized between its own local integrity efforts and her group, which has been able to get tangible results in improving election integrity. More integrity was brought to a local Democrat county commissioner race, where the candidate was able to get a recount that resulted in her winning the race.

The election board [including] Democrats and Republicans all helped out and made sure that they helped get the outcome of this election, right. They did a hand count of that election, and instead of coming in third place, which is what the machine count showed, she actually was the first place finisher, went on to the runoff, and is now the nominee for the Democrat side, said Martin.

The mainstream media has maligned the efforts of the Conservative Partnership Institute and Martins group, accusing them of siding with former President Donald Trumps narrative about a stolen election.

Martin said she cant control how the mainstream media chooses to portray their work, but what I can do is make sure we at least understand the laws and what we are able to choose, safeguard, and correct [election processes] and that we are the check and balance that the state law actually has in the statute.

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Masooma Haq began reporting for The Epoch Times from Pakistan in 2008. She currently covers a variety of topics including U.S. government, culture, and entertainment.

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Roman Balmakov is a Reporter with The Epoch Times and host of the show, Facts Matter. He has travelled around the country (as well as overseas) covering protests, riots, and elections. He is also the producer of many Epoch Times commercials, both on TV and social media.

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Over 6,000 Have Participated in Election Integrity Trainings so Far: Tea Party Patriots' Co-founder - The Epoch Times

Tea time: Join Mad Max for desert tea party – The Grand Junction Daily Sentinel

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Tea time: Join Mad Max for desert tea party - The Grand Junction Daily Sentinel

BEECHEY: Art show, tea party and more at Annandale National Historic Site – The Sarnia Observer

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Where else can you go in Tillsonburg to find cool things to do like an art show, cemetery tour, 150thanniversary events and souvenirs, a tea party, an oatmeal breakfast, lunch with a mayor, and a Halloween party?

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Well, that is what is coming up this fall at Annandale National Historic Site, aka the museum!

Oxford Creative Connections Inc. is back again to present its Small Wonders Art Show & Sale, which opens Saturday, Sept. 10with booths on the lawn of the museum from 12 noon to 4 p.m. It is also the start of their indoor exhibit in the Pratt Gallery, which will continue through Oct. 30.

The entire family can enjoy the amazing talent of our local Oxford County arts community. The museum will be open for visitors to explore the OCCI Indoor Art Show in the Pratt Gallery whereall pieces of art are no larger than 1214 inches! Plus, 20 per cent of the sales go to the Annandale House Trust, so you just might want to think of birthday, Christmas, or any reason, to give a special, unique gift!

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You can also tourthis 1883 historic Victorian home of E.D. and Mary Ann Tillson with its glorious painted ceilings and other amazing artwork.E.D. was our first mayor in 1872 and the son of our founder, George.Admission is by donation.

How about a meet and greet of Tillsonburgs first mayor and council? Granted they are dead, butyou get to visit them at there their eternal resting places in the Tillsonburg Cemetery during a guided tour.This is a special Tillsonburg 150 event with your choice of Thursday, Sept.15, or Saturday, Sept. 17, from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. Admission by donation call for a spot on a tour.

On Wednesday, Oct. 5, from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. you can reminisce about those cute little figurines everyone collected that came in Red Rose Tea. The company started this promotional gimmick with the Wade Whimsies, from the Wade pottery company, back in 1967. You can Wade into Tea at a tea party with curator Patricia Phelps.

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While enjoying tea and pie you will learn about the history of the Red Rose Tea Companys Wade tea figurines promotional campaign, which still goes on today. You will also take a Wade Figurine home as a gift. (Was there ever a skunk figurine?) Cost is $20 plus tax.

On Friday, Oct. 21, from 12 noon to 2 p.m. you can meet a past, yet still alive mayor at another Tillsonburg 150 event: Luncheon with John Armstrong: Past Mayor of Tillsonburg! You will have a delicious luncheon followed by an interesting talk by former Mayor John Armstrong as he discusses his time as the mayor of Tillsonburg (1977-1982). Cost is $25 plus tax.

Monday, Oct. 24, from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. (yes, in the morning) is another specialTillsonburg 150 event: Oatmeal Breakfast at the Museum. Oatmeal?Yes! It is National Oatmeal Day and Tillsonburg is linked to oatmeal, for E.D. Tillson produces the international breakfast hit, Tillsons Pan Dried Oatmeal.

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Alas, we dont have the original, but you will enjoy an instant oatmeal breakfast in a limited edition Tillsonburg 150 souvenir bowl, which is yours to keep.Coffee, tea, juice, toast, and bowl are included. Cost is $10 plus tax for adults, $8 plus tax for kids.This event is open to all ages, but pre-registration is a must!Sittings are on the half-hour starting at 8 a.m. The last sitting is 11 a.m.Limited seating, please pre-register.

What else would you expect in October? Why a Family Halloween Party which the whole family can enjoy, Sunday, Oct. 30, from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.Get out your favourite Halloween costume to celebrate the spooky season with games, crafts, treats and your very own pumpkin to take home! Its F-U-N for every age!Cost is $25 per family plus tax (plus $5 for each additional pumpkin).

You can registrar for all these programs now either online via your Connect2Rec Account (https://www.tillsonburg.ca/en/live-and-play/connect2rec-upgrade.aspx)or call the museum at 519-842-2294.

Annandale House has been located at30 Tillson Ave. in Tillsonburg for 139 years! If you have not visited the Tillson farmhouse yet, you are in for a treat as the Tillsons followed many of the teachings purported by Oscar Wilde when decorating this home, one of the reasons Annandale House is a National Historic Site! You will be amazed.

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BEECHEY: Art show, tea party and more at Annandale National Historic Site - The Sarnia Observer

Louie Gohmert leaves Congress having passed one law and spread countless falsehoods – The Texas Tribune

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WASHINGTON In 2010, U.S. Rep. Louie Gohmert warned the nation from the floor of the House of Representatives about a looming threat: terrorist babies. He described without providing evidence a diabolical and far-fetched scheme in which foreign enemies were sending pregnant women to the U.S. to birth babies that would emerge decades later as terrorists.

He found out about it, he said, from a conversation with a retired FBI agent on a flight, even as the FBI said it had no information about any such plot.

He would go on to fight with CNN anchor Anderson Cooper in an interview that went viral as he for nearly 10 minutes refused to answer questions or provide evidence of the claim, while yelling at Cooper for attacking the messenger.

It was a breakout moment for the Republican congressman from East Texas, who had been in office for about five years at the time and whose profile was growing as a member of the newly founded Tea Party. He was something of an outlier in Congress for the ease with which he was willing to make unfounded and offensive pronouncements. But it would prove to be a harbinger of what was yet to come.

This January, Gohmert, who turned 69 on Thursday, leaves office having defined his 17-year congressional career with conspiracy, conflict and fomenting anger.

Some of his most memorable controversies include the time he compared homosexuality to bestiality. Or when he said Hillary Clinton was mentally impaired. Or when he speculated that wearing a mask is what caused him to catch COVID-19. Or when he compared former President Barack Obama to Adolf Hitler. Or when he said the canceling of a television show for homophobic remarks by its hosts was on par with Nazism. Or when he said he was grieving over the arrests of rioters involved in the Jan. 6 insurrection.

Gohmert was a precursor to former President Donald Trumps brand of populist, establishment-bucking conservatism that delights in offending progressives and makes no apologies for spreading misinformation.

He fostered angry, finger-pointing, conspiracy-theory-laden politics that now defines American politics," said Brandon Rottinghaus, a political scientist at the University of Houston. "He was the original congressional antagonist.

Now hes leaving Congress because he opted to run for Texas attorney general instead of reelection for his seat which he presumably would have won easily.

He entered the Republican primary for attorney general last November months after the other candidates, including incumbent Ken Paxton and raised by far the least amount of money. He came in last place.

He exits office as Texas ninth most senior member of Congress, having made a mark but not legislatively. In nine congressional terms, hes passed just one bill into law, a measure in 2017 that simplified the process for calling 911.

Gohmert will perhaps be better remembered for his penchant for going against the majority. He was the only member in the House to vote against a bill last month to suspend tariffs on baby formula imports during a national shortage. (He said the bill was rushed.) He single-handedly delayed for a day the passage of an emergency coronavirus relief package that funded free COVID-19 tests, two weeks of paid sick leave and a billion dollars in food aid. (He later withdrew his objection to allow the bill to pass with unanimous consent.) And he was one of four members to vote against making lynching a federal hate crime. (He said the bills maximum sentence was not harsh enough.)

He's gone from something of an outlier that people chalked up to some combination of region and personality, to someone who is more representative of a big faction of a big share of Republican voters and even Republican elites.

His retirement will be less of the end of an era, and more of a changing of the guard as the House is attracting a new, younger class of like-minded firebrands who similarly seek conflict over policymaking and who came into office during Trumps presidency. In recent years, Gohmerts found allies in the House Freedom Caucus including Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Matt Gaetz of Florida. Last year, they attempted to visit a Washington, D.C., jail where rioters from the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol are being imprisoned. Greene recently urged the GOP to become the party of Christian nationalism and has made comments supportive of QAnon, an unfounded conspiracy theory and far-right political movement that claims Trump is waging a secret war against Satanic pedophiles.

He's gone from something of an outlier that people chalked up to some combination of region and personality, to someone who is more representative of a big faction of a big share of Republican voters and even Republican elites, said Jim Henson, the director of the Texas Politics Project at the University of Texas at Austin.

Gohmert repeatedly declined to be interviewed for this story and did not answer questions sent to his office via email.

Asked in a brief exchange on Capitol Hill last month about his time in Congress, he said: I got a lot done, wish it would have been more, but I didn't care who got the credit. Got a lot of things passed on, changed, amended, fixed behind the scenes. He did not answer a question about what he considers his signature achievement.

In his deep-red congressional district, voters have rewarded Gohmert for his combative reputation. Hes never faced a serious electoral challenge, and in his bid for attorney general, he placed first in the 17 counties near his hometown, despite placing last statewide. His supporters say hes never wavered in his principles unlike other Republicans they say care too much about appeasing party leadership.

He has always been true to who he is. He has been uncompromising in his faith and his love for East Texas, for his community, for his country, said David Stein, chair of the Smith County GOP.

Gohmert entered Congress in 2005, unseating a Democrat incumbent a year earlier. He was previously a U.S. Army captain and state district judge in Smith County. In 1996, Gohmert raised eyebrows in his role as a district judge when he ordered an auto thief who was HIV-positive to seek written consent from any future sexual partners. Former Gov. Rick Perry appointed him to be chief justice of Texas 12th Court of Appeals in 2002.

Bills on which Gohmert has been the lead sponsor have passed the House six times. Only one was ever signed into law. Of the 118 House members still in office who started before 2010, just 10 have passed fewer bills in the House than Gohmert three Republicans and seven Democrats according to a Texas Tribune analysis. None of those members were Texans. Six members have passed the same number of bills.

Unlike other longtime members of Congress from Texas like Reps. Kevin Brady, R-The Woodlands; Eddie Bernice Johnson, D-Dallas; and Michael McCaul, R-Austin Gohmert has never chaired a congressional committee. However, he once chaired a subcommittee that provided natural resources oversight.

Im not sure what he was able to accomplish, I really have no idea, said U.S. Rep. Sylvia Garcia, D-Houston, who serves with Gohmert on the judiciary committee.

His supporters in Texas are unbothered by his lack of a policy record. Matt Long, president of the Fredericksburg Tea Party, which endorsed Gohmert for attorney general, acknowledged Gohmerts ability to pass bills has been compromised because of his reputation for standing up to his own party leadership.

If they dont toe the line immediately with the establishment Republicans, then they dont have a chance, Long said.

Texas state Rep. Kyle Biedermann, R-Fredericksburg, also backed Gohmert for attorney general and said passing bills doesnt make someone a successful politician.

Effectiveness has nothing to do with bills, Biedermann said. Effectiveness is speaking out for the people, being the voice of the people.

That has become a growing mantra of todays Republican Party. More Republicans are focusing on fighting for their constituents and party loyalty, while villainizing efforts to negotiate across the aisle to pass laws.

Its been very alarming to see the Republican Party become more about performance, U.S. Rep. Veronica Escobar, D-El Paso, said. It is becoming more and more like Louie Gohmert and less and less serious about legislation and public policy and solving real solutions.

Gohmert started making waves in 2009, when he and 11 other Republican members of Congress cosponsored the so-called birther bill that would have required presidential candidates to produce a copy of their birth certificate pressing a false narrative that Obama was born in Kenya and therefore ineligible to be president. (Obama was born in Hawaii, and his father was born in Kenya.)

The birther saga was among the first of several instances in which Gohmert leaned into racist conspiracy theories and took on the role of an instigator. He co-led an effort in 2012 calling for the State Department to investigate the relationship between the Muslim Brotherhood and Huma Abedin, a former top aide to Hillary Clinton.

After Obamas 2015 State of the Union speech that addressed nationwide instances of police brutality, Gohmert condemned the president for dividing the country, adding that the president should be more like his former basketball coach, another Black man.

But unlike my favorite coach in high school, who happened to be Black, he has been more divisive," Gohmert told reporters.

Gohmert was also just as likely to agitate his own party leadership. In 2014, Gohmert brought up his famously tense relationship with then-House Speaker John Boehner while speaking to the Upshur County Republican Executive Committee.

If there was one more Louie Gohmert, John Boehner would have a heart attack, Gohmert said. Boehner was a staunch Republican but faced pressure from hardline conservatives who felt he wasnt doing enough to stand up to Democrats.

In 2015, Gohmert would launch a quixotic bid to unseat Boehner as House speaker.

Later that year, when Boehner announced his resignation, Gohmert took a victory lap.

So often, after being elected to Congress, members have the goal drilled into their head that there is nothing nobler than being a team player, he said. For an appropriate use of the sports metaphor, too often being a team player has disguised the fact that a play has been called that has us running toward the wrong goal line.

The feeling was mutual. In American Carnage, a book about the modern Republican Party, Boehner told author Tim Alberta, Louie Gohmert is insane. Theres not a functional brain in there.

Gaetz, the Florida congressman and Gohmert ally, commended Gohmert for bucking the party.

He warned against bad decisions Republicans made that lost them majorities and he inspired some of our best moments, Gaetz said in an interview.

In 2015, Boehner cut Gohmert from two congressional diplomacy trips to the Middle East and Africa in retaliation after Gohmert had challenged him for House speaker.

But Gohmert didnt mind.

Because he canceled my trip this weekend, Im going to be on Fox News, so thank you, Mr. Speaker, Gohmert taunted.

He would in fact go on to become a fixture on right-wing media networks. Hes a regular guest on Newsmax and One America News, networks that have served as a farther-right alternative to Fox News and have become more popular in recent years as Trumps popularity ascended. Hes recently had segments focusing on what he considers the abhorrent treatment of Jan. 6 rioters, whom he has called political prisoners.

Brady, the representative from The Woodlands who is also retiring this year, said Gohmerts legacy will be defined as an outspoken conservative who was in the media trenches every day.

His strengths are in the messaging and the communication and in really the social media space there. I think thats where he feels most comfortable, Brady said.

He added that he thinks social media has in some ways driven politics to the extremes, which has overshadowed some of the more substantive work and solutions that are so important to run the country.

When Gohmerts not appearing on a conservative news network, he can often be found doing what he calls Gohmert Hour, one-hour speeches on the House floor where he speaks in front of a near-empty chamber. A speech in June claimed there were no school shootings before prayer was eliminated in schools. Since entering Congress, he has spent 286 hours speaking on the House floor, according to C-SPAN data.

Rep. August Pfluger, R-San Angelo, said I love listening to him. I love his passion. Rep. Chip Roy, R-Austin, called Gohmert one of the best we have and one of the true characters of the House.

Its unknown if Gohmerts successor will be a policymaker or bomb thrower. Nathaniel Moran won the Republican nomination earlier this year and is all but ensured to win the general election in the deep-red district.

Moran is a longtime fixture in Republican politics and is currently the Smith County Judge. He did not respond to multiple requests for an interview but has said that he wants to be a policymaker and loves to be part of a team, according to an interview with The Washington Post.

They hold similar values, no question about it, said Stein, the Smith County GOP chair who knows Gohmert and Moran personally. To quote Judge Moran, he may go about it tactically in a different way. And thats just a matter of preferential style. But he is a strong conservative.

Since the 2020 election, Gohmert has joined the chorus of Trump acolytes who have spread the falsehood that the election was stolen. The claim has been repeatedly debunked by courts and election audits, and many of the former presidents own top aides have testified that the election was fair.

As he prepares to leave office, Gohmerts role spreading that misinformation and how it may have contributed to the deadly Jan. 6 insurrection is being scrutinized by congressional investigators.

During the hearings this summer held by the House committee investigating the attack, he was mentioned frequently for his rhetoric ahead of the riot and for taking part in a December 2020 meeting to discuss former Vice President Mike Pences role in overturning the election results.

A Republican staffer who worked for Trumps chief of staff Mark Meadows said Gohmert was among a group of Republicans who asked Trump for a pardon after the insurrection. Gohmert has emphatically denied doing so.

Gohmerts appearances in the hearings werent a surprise. Days before the insurrection, U.S. Capitol Police flagged comments from Gohmert as potentially inciting violence. In an interview on Newsmax, Gohmert said letting President Joe Bidens electoral victory stand would be the end of our republic, the end of the experiment in self-government.

You got to go to the streets and be as violent as Antifa and [Black Lives Matter], said Gohmert five days before the Capitol attack. He later said he was not advocating for violence.

In December 2020, Gohmert led a lawsuit that attempted to give the vice president the power to unilaterally name the next president. A federal judge dismissed the suit for lack of standing.

Gohmert, who objected to the electoral results in Arizona and Pennsylvania, would later downplay the insurrection. He sponsored a bill to award congressional gold medals to Capitol Police officers but made no mention of the Jan. 6 attack. He later voted against a bill to honor the officers that made an explicit reference to the attack.

Gohmert said the bill does not honor anyone, but rather seeks to drive a narrative that isnt substantiated by known facts.

Last month on Newsmax, Gohmert said it grieves me to see the vendettas against the Capitol rioters who have been imprisoned. He said hed have no problem imprisoning some of the rioters, but that most of them committed misdemeanors. He tried to visit the imprisoned rioters last year at a Washington, D.C., jail but was not allowed a tour without receiving prior approval.

Gohmert leaves office less of an outlier than he once was, during a time when his ideas are becoming more pervasive in the mainstream of the party.

A Monmouth University poll in June found 61% of Republicans considered the Jan. 6 attack a legitimate protest, up from 47% a year earlier. Only 13% of Republicans considered the attack an insurrection and 45% called it a riot.

As of Tuesday, Trump-endorsed candidates for the U.S. House, U.S. Senate and statewide offices had won 42 out of 54 of their primaries this year, according to Axios.

Until the American public says theyve had enough of it, my suspicion is that youre gonna have more people like Louie Gohmert, said Sean Theriault, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin who has researched Congress.

Disclosure: University of Texas at Austin and University of Houston have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

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Louie Gohmert leaves Congress having passed one law and spread countless falsehoods - The Texas Tribune

Cheney’s and Murkowski’s fates tied to their states’ primary systems – York Dispatch

Jeannette Lee| The Fulcrum(TNS)

If you want to know how to save American democracy, look no further than the cases of Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney and Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski. The primary elections systems in their states dictated two divergent political fates.

Both Cheney and Murkowski are established Republican incumbents from sparsely populated red states; each serves in a seat held by her father. Both face retribution from their party and conservative media for choosing the Constitution above loyalty to former President Donald Trump. Cheney voted to impeach Trump and Murkowski to convict him for his part in the storming of the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

On Tuesday, Alaska and Wyoming held primary elections. Cheney lost by 37 points, while Murkowski advanced with three other candidates to the general election. To be sure, Wyomings electorate is redder and more pro-Trump than Alaskas, and Cheney, as co-chair of the Jan. 6 committee, is Trumps most visible and vocal critic within the party. But their contrasting fates came down to the rules of the primaries themselves.

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Cheney went up against Trump-endorsed candidate Harriet Hageman in a closed party primary where she needed to win a plurality from a mostly Republican electorate. With just one winner advancing from each partys primary, the scales couldnt be tipped even by a sizable number of Democrats likely switching registration to vote for Cheney in the GOP primary. Murkowski, meanwhile, ran in Alaskas new primary where all candidates appear on a single ballot. Murkowski easily secured her spot on the November ballot. (She was in first place as of Wednesday, with 80 percent of precincts reporting.) The key differences? Murkowskis primary was open to all Alaska voters and the four top vote-getters move to the general election.

In an open primary, Cheney would have advanced to the general election with no problem, whether or not Wyoming Democrats opted to vote for her.

Great divide: Closed party primaries are force multipliers for the polarization that afflicts the United States. They feed the trend of congressional Republicans lurching to the right and, to a lesser degree, of congressional Democrats moving left.

In 2010, the Tea Party vociferously opposed Republicans who had voted for the recession relief bill. In some districts that were safe for the Republican Party, a Tea Party challenger beat the more mainstream Republican in the primary, becoming the sole choice for Republican voters and quite safe in the general election.

Fear among moderate, measured or mainstream candidates of being primaried moved them away from bipartisan cooperation and edged their politics further to the extremes. Murkowski learned this the hard way. In 2010, Tea Party candidate Joe Miller won Alaskas closed Republican primary, appearing to eliminate Murkowski from the race. But she ran a historic write-in campaign and won an uphill fight in the general election by appealing to a broad cross-section of voters.

Open, pick-one primaries that send the top four or five vote-getters to the general, on the other hand, prevent popular mainstream incumbents from being primaried by partisan extremists in low-turnout summer races. Indeed, open, top-four primaries incentivize candidates to pander to the center that is, not to the hyper-partisan minority but to the more centrist majority, something the United States could use a lot more of.

These two sets of primary rules are so divergent in outcomes that if Alaska and Wyoming swapped election methods, Cheney would almost certainly survive her primary and Murkowski would have been knocked out of hers. Alaska pollster Ivan Moore told The Associated Press that in a closed primary Murkowski would have had a zero percent I mean zero percent chance of winning.

Its that simple.

Another late-breaking and lower-profile illustration comes from Washington state, where primaries are open, not closed, but where only two candidates go on to the general election. Jaime Herrera-Beutler is the six-term incumbent Republican representing the 3rd district in the states southwest corner. It is home to both urban and suburban areas in and around Vancouver, Washington (just north of Portland, Oregon), as well as vast rural stretches extending through the south-central region of the state.

Herrera-Beutler voted to impeach Trump, who attacked her over the course of the campaign while endorsing a far-right GOP challenger. In late vote counts last week, that challenger overtook her by a smidge, pushing her from second place to third. Herrera-Beutler conceded the race.

If Washington used Alaskas top-four system, Herrera-Beutler would have gone on to the general election, where a vastly larger, less ideological electorate might well have sent her back to Congress.

Independent voice: Every GOP member of Congress who voted to impeach or convict Trump and who is running for reelection in a closed primary has now lost that race: Tom Rice in South Carolina, Peter Meijer in Michigan and Liz Cheney in Wyoming. They all lost to Trump-endorsed right-wing candidates. Of the four GOP members who voted to impeach or convict Trump and ran for reelection in an open primary, only one has lost: Herrera-Beutler. Three have survived: Murkowski, Dan Newhouse in Washington and David Valadao in California.

To be clear, all open primaries are good but not equally good. Open primaries that send the top four vote-getters to the general rather than just the top two are superior. They minimize the chances that the general election ballot will only offer extremists or candidates from one party. They give a real voice to the independent, unaffiliated and third-party voters who together represent about 40 percent of the U.S. electorate and about 58 percent of Alaskas.

Alaska pairs the open primary with a ranked-choice general election, where candidates will again have the chance to appeal to a wide swath of voters.

The way Alaska, Washington, Wyoming or any state runs its primaries will not solely determine who runs in the general election. But changing the rules to give more voters more voice earlier in the election process is one way to unrig our election process and give candidates with broad appeal a chance to compete at all.

Jeannette Lee is a senior researcher and Alaska lead for Sightline Institute.

The Fulcrum covers what's making democracy dysfunctional and efforts to fix our governing systems. Sign up for our newsletter atthefulcrum.us. The Fulcrum is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news platform covering efforts to fix our governing systems. It is a project of, but editorially independent from, Issue One.

Excerpt from:
Cheney's and Murkowski's fates tied to their states' primary systems - York Dispatch