Editorial: Rejecting the Republican war on local democracy … – Madison.com

The Republican war on local democracy is a top-down effort to prevent Americans from voting where they live to protect the environment, preserve their communities, promote public safety, respect civil liberties, organize fair elections, raise wages, guarantee family and medical leave for workers, and welcome immigrants.

While the Trump administration's assault on sanctuary cities as part of the aggressive anti-immigrant agenda promoted by the president and Attorney General Jeff Sessions gets a good deal of attention, the federal and state pre-emption of local ordinances and local processes that ensure voters have a voice has accelerated as President Trump and House Speaker Paul Ryan have taken power in D.C. and Trump-style governors and Ryan-style legislators have placed their imprints on Republican-controlled states across the country.

Encouraged by groups such as the American Legislative Exchange Council, with an authoritarian agenda dictated by corporate-allied funders such as billionaire brothers Charles and David Koch, the top-down politicians in states across the country have attacked local democracy at the county, city, village and town levels of government. And in few states has the gubernatorial and legislative overreach been so extreme as in Scott Walker's Wisconsin.

But voters are starting to push back by pushing out politicians who go along with top-down and anti-democratic policies.

In Wisconsin, resistance came about recently after a bill was introduced in the Legislature that proponents said would streamline the process for towns to withdraw from countywide zoning. As originally written, the legislation would have made any vote by town residents on opting out advisory rather than binding, taking the decision out of the hands of voters and giving it to the town board.

As the Republican-controlled Legislature advanced the legislation, residents of the town of Middleton in Dane County caught wind of what was happening. They wanted to send a clear signal that the town should protect the right of residents to have a say. Dissatisfied with what they saw as failures of focus and advocacy on the part of the town chairman and a key Town Board member, challengers stepped forward to highlight the local democracy issues that came into play as the state Assembly was considering the zoning bill in March.

But the April 4 election was only a few weeks away, and the filing deadline to get on the ballot had passed. So the local-democracy candidates had to mount write-in bids.

We just decided the way to win this was to knock on every door in the town of Middleton that was physically possible, said Cynthia Richson, a town plan commission member, who took on the incumbent town chairman. Former Town Board member Richard Oberle challenged an incumbent board member who,as The Capital Times reported, had pushed for a zoning opt-out law that was signed in 2016 and had also backed the bill that "would have relegated resident votes to advisory, as opposed to binding.

Both Richson and Oberle won their write-in bidsin a result that shocked local political observers and made news well beyond Dane County.

Rightly so, as the town of Middleton election was about more than local issues. It was about defending local democracy at a time when too many politicians in Madison and Washington are attacking it.

The challengers were opposed to opting out of Dane County zoning. But the primary focus of their campaigning was the right of citizens to have a say when big decisions are being made. Number one, explained Oberle, is to make sure the citizens are allowed to have a vote on this opt-out issue and get informed about it so they can make a good decision.

The opt-out bill, which is still pending, was eventually changed to restore a vote by town residents, and the wranglingover zoning has continued. Different sentiments have been heard in the town of Middleton and in towns across Dane County. But this is about more than zoning and land use. This is about democracy.

When you cut the people you are elected to represent out of the process, thats going to haunt you, said Dane County Executive Joe Parisi, a critic of the zoning opt-out bill. People in our community overwhelmingly want us to manage our growth in a manner that maintains the quality of life and the character of our community. And people want to have a voice in how we grow.

There are voters in Dane County towns who have agreed with Parisi, just as there are voters who have disagreed.

Whats essential is that the process remain open and transparent, that barriers to civic participation be removed, and that voting is easy, inclusive and definitional.

Thats something conservative Republicans in the Legislature do not understand.

They have little respect for local democracy especially when local democracy might trip up the plans of development interests that make substantial campaign donations.

If write-in candidates mounting last-minute bids on behalf of local democracy can win in the town of Middleton, they can win in other places as well. And a new generation of contenders can take on the Republican legislators who so frequently disrespect and disregard the will of the people who live in Wisconsin towns, villages and cities.

Newly elected town of Middleton Chair Cynthia Richson got it right when she said after her write-in win: I would hope that it would be a reminder and perhaps a wake-up call to other representatives who may be deciding that once they get elected that they can pursue any agenda they personally want to as opposed to reaching out to their electors and taking public input.

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Editorial: Rejecting the Republican war on local democracy ... - Madison.com

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