LETTER OF THE WEEK
In a democracy, the vote belongs to the people, and in the Tom Harman
case, it allowed me to vote for a qualified Republican candidate with
experience.
Without Harman, to get a conservative to win, I would have had to vote
[in March] for an unknown, never-before elected individual whose only
qualification was “party apparatchik,” reminiscent of how things are done
in the old Soviet Union.
Huntington Beach should not be robbed of its vote by the party money
machine.
The Soviets liked to exclude independent thinkers. If the parties want
to exclude voters, the parties should pay for the primary and not use tax
dollars. If I, as an American, decided to put “decline to state” on my
ballot, I should not be prevented from having my vote count in a taxpayer
financed activity.
I am one of those former conservative Republicans that, like so many
of my friends, left the Republican party because of its poor
environmental record and the fact that the party money machine would
usually pick an unqualified, inexperienced candidate, i.e. [Jim]
Righeimer.
The blanket primary allows me to vote for a qualified, experienced
Republican candidate. Without the blanket primary, my vote would have
been wasted on someone who has no qualifications and no experience.
The voting process belongs to the people, not the party nor the party
money machine. Taxpayer money should not be used for what now is a party
function.
PAUL ARMS
Huntington Beach
* EDITOR’S NOTE: The Supreme Court ruled 7 to 2 last week that blanket
or open primaries, which allowed voters to choose candidates of any party
during a primary election, are unconstitutional.
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