Don't we remember? Denying the parties their caucuses was unconstitutional
Are we done yet with whining about Washington's ludicrous caucus and primary system? Sometimes, reading those whines, you start to wonder: Is the writer or are the people talking about wolves or other predators? (It isn't pretty, but where would we be if caucuses didn't cull out the elderly and disabled?) Is this about TV ratings? (If we dumb this show down enough, we can boost our audience share.) They certainly aren't talking about political parties as the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals views them.
The Ninth Circuit delivered a little civics lesson just five years ago, when it consigned Washington's popular "blanket" primary to the scrap heap of history. The blanket primary, which allowed a voter to choose either Democratic or Republican candidates without declaring party allegiance, was passed by a Grange-sponsored initiative back in 1934. Until then, you had to sign up as a Democrat or Republican, and the victorious party consulted the voting lists before it decided who would and would not get government jobs.
The Grange initiative won handily, and the Legislature dutifully passed a blanket primary law the next year. Inevitably, the blanket primary was challenged as unconstitutional. When the case reached the Washington state Supreme Court, the justices gave short shrift to the interests of political parties. In 1936, the court noted an argument
that the law tends to destroy political parties. Counsel [for the opponents] confess that they can find no specific provision of the constitution on which to base the contention, but they assert the general utility and necessity of parties, and argue therefrom that legislation tending to destroy them must receive the condemnation of the courts. It has seemed to us, however, that this is a political rather than a judicial question, and that an appeal from the legislative decision must be made to the people rather than to the courts.
The state Supreme Court said it was "undisputed" that "the constitution takes no concern of political parties." Therefore, "a law will not be held to be unconstitutional [just because] it may destroy these organizations."
But that was a long time ago. In 2000, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a similar California primary was unconstitutional (California Democratic Party v. Jones, 530 U.S. 567 [2000]), and the Washington parties tried again. The Ninth Circuit said in 2003 that the recent Supreme Court ruling gave it no choice (Democratic Party of Washington State v. Reed, 343 F.3d 1198 [Ninth Cir. 2003]).
"The Washington [primary] scheme is materially indistinguishable from the California scheme held to violate the constitutional right of free association in Jones," the justices explained. "The Washington scheme denies party adherents the opportunity to nominate their party's candidate free of the risk of being swamped by voters whose preference is for the other party."
Basically, the court ruled that political activists have a perfect right to exclude outsiders. It said that
those who actively participate in partisan activities, including ... holding precinct caucuses in their homes, serving on local and state party committees, contributing money to their parties, canvassing, and watching polls for their parties, have a First Amendment right to further their party's program for what they see as good governance. Their right to freely associate for this purpose is thwarted because the Washington statutory scheme prevents those voters who share their affiliation from selecting their party's nominees. The right of people adhering to a political party to freely associate is not limited to getting together for cocktails and canapes.
(Somehow, this evokes Madison and Jefferson less than it does Kinky Friedman singing "we reserve the right to refuse service to you.")
The Legislature quickly passed – but then-Gov. Gary Locke vetoed – a bill that would have established a "top two" primary, in which the two candidates who received the most votes in the primary, regardless of party, would appear on the general election ballot. After Locke's veto, in 2004, the Grange sponsored Initiative 872, to make the top-two primary into law. The people passed it overwhelmingly, but the parties challenged it, and again a federal court found that it violated the party members' right to freedom of association.
The judicial message is clear: A political party isn't a public entity. It's a membership organization like the National Rifle Association, the American Civil Liberties Union, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, or the Ku Klux Klan. Its leaders can associate with whomever they choose. Even if they associate for the purpose of choosing a presidential candidate, it's their own damn business.









Comments:
Posted Tue, Feb 26, 11:14 a.m. inappropriate
Wrong: Many states have successful primaries in which voters, registered as members of a party, vote for a candidate of the party to which they are registered. Amazingly they are able to accomplish this without running afoul of the courts. If only Washington were able to do the same.
I believe that parties have the right to choose on their own, in a manner of their own choosing, the nominees they wish to put up for a general election. I too wish we had party registration in Washington and limited access primaries and then we would be able to avoid costly caucuses. Of course it's only costly for the voters. You should have seen the bags of money that the precincts walked away with, not to mention a list of potential members and donors.
Sadly it seems unlikely the caucuses will go away, only for that reason.
Posted Tue, Feb 26, 11:41 a.m. inappropriate
Wronger: It's none of the state's business to be registering and assigning people to political parties. The state can establish the ground rules for state and local elections, but national elections are a different kind of thing. If members of a party want to assemble at a caucus and pick their candidate by vote, or drawing lots, or playing spin the bottle, that's the party's business not the state's. The state's only role is to make sure the process is run as advertised and free of fraud. Forcing people to register with the state by party, however, makes the state, not the parties, the arbiter of who is a member of what. We don't let the state dictate who can join the Elks Club, why should they have that power over political parties?
Posted Tue, Feb 26, 11:52 a.m. inappropriate
Still, the caucuses need to stay. Grassroots interaction is disappearing even with strong party control over the nominating process, and whatever can be done to encourage people to actually interact face to face ought to be fostered.
The Piper
Posted Tue, Feb 26, 12:26 p.m. inappropriate
No play, no pay: Let the party do what it wants in nominating their respective candidates. Let them pay for it as well. No State payments for primaries, period. No State money to maintain or register party affiliations. No State money for party based voter outreach. I would like to see the Party pay for rent on the space their caucus rooms take up at the Capital. These folks certainly have the right to assemble and the freedom to associate, they simply should not have the right to make those they exclude from their private processes pay for it.
Posted Tue, Feb 26, 1:14 p.m. inappropriate
The Piper
Posted Tue, Feb 26, 1:42 p.m. inappropriate
RE: No play, no pay: Great idea Cameron. If the "private" political parties wants to play by their own rules, they can PAY fully for them as well. And as a second front in this battle to include more than just the crazy, and "not that busy on a saturday," people in the nominating process, let's quit making donations to the political parties if they won't open up the process by holding a primary.
Posted Wed, Feb 27, 9:53 a.m. inappropriate
To Victory Heights: You can't say on the one hand that the parties should pay their own way -- we already do with the caucuses -- and then force them to hold primaries. It doesn't work. It isn't legal.
If we're paying our own way we get to do it the way we want to. If people want a primary, they will have to accept partisan registration, like darn near every other state has.
Posted Wed, Feb 27, 11:52 a.m. inappropriate
PCO elections: The judicial message is clear: A political party isn't a public entity.
When we get down the road on caucuses and primaries, I always come down to other parts of the political organization, specifically how these organizations are put together on a day to day basis.
If political parties aren't public entities, then why is there a mandate in state law for the membership of these organizations (county and LD central committees, who elect the state central committee, who elect state officers, including the chairman of the party) be elected in publicly paid for elections?
We elect Republican and Democratic (major party) precinct committee officers in Washington. If the parties weren't pseudo public agencies, then they could do away with these elections.
Right?
Posted Wed, Feb 27, 12:34 p.m. inappropriate
Wrongest: We all pay for elections - yet the laws enacted by the legislature in response to this federal decision specifically require that all crossover and independent votes not be tabulated.
Personally, I'm fine if the parties do as they wish, at their expense. But when you charge us to exclude us from being able to even have our say the quote that comes to mind is 'taxation without representation'.
Am I comparing both the D's and the R's to 18th century Torries? Well, maybe, but the 'foreign' invader is not the Brits this time around, but corporate America.
These folks, and their legal lackies from Gregoire on down, think it to be a case of harrassment if an independent asks them to be accountable. Methinks the 'harrassment' is the other way around. Gregoire and her associates, public and private, think such individuals are the 21st century equivalent of blacks in the 19th.
Perhaps instead we should make 2nd class citizens of those who would attempt to make a responsible independent one?
-Douglas Tooley
Lincoln, Tacoma