On
his call-in radio program last week, Gov. John Bel Edwards fielded
a question about changing Louisiana’s blanket primary system. The Democrat
said, “Somebody has got to really come in and convince me that there is
something that I am unmindful of in terms of a benefit that we would have if we
went back to that system.”
“That system” referred to closed primaries, in
which party primary elections occur to nominate candidates for a general election,
wherein only voters who choose to affiliate with a party may participate in one
party’s primary. Louisiana’s blanket primary system, unique among the states, technically
serves as the general election instead, where all voters regardless of
affiliation may vote on all candidates regardless of affiliation running
together in which the winner receives a simple majority, but if not secured
then the two with the most votes advance to a runoff.
(Note: some observers use the slang term “jungle primary” in reference to Louisiana’s system. Others call it a “nonpartisan primary” because its election is really a general election; thus, prior to the Supreme Court’s Foster v. Love decision it properly was a “blanket primary” because the election occurred prior to the national election day, with any runoff occurring on that day.)
Edwards claimed the blanket primary had the edge
on closed primaries, or by implication open primaries as well – where candidates
compete for one party’s nomination to advance to the general election in a
primary election in which any voter can participate in one party’s primary – because
closed primaries reputedly produce “less bipartisanship, and less rigid
ideological partisanship that is run by those at the extreme of the two parties”
(the last phrase is convoluted, but I think he’s trying to say that more
extreme ideologues end up elected and imposing their policy preferences in
governing).
This reflects the political culture in Washington,
DC, Edwards indicated, thereby implying that his state’s politics appear to feature
fewer ideological appeals because the blanket primary sends more moderate politicians
to Baton Rouge. Of course, you couldn’t tell by his rhetoric, where Edwards has
proven one of the most polarizing governors in Louisiana history in how he
always casts those who disagree with his policy preferences as enemies of what’s
good for the state and its people.
How his bloviating illustrates potential extremism
generated by the blanket primary system that got him there serves as anecdotal
evidence against his argument, but there’s empirical evidence that disputes his
allegation as well. The latest
research on the question on how primary form influences the direction of policy
output not only provides no real evidence to back that the kind of primary affects
amount of polarization, but what little significant effect it does demonstrate
is that the more “open” a primary, the more ideologically extreme candidates
tend to win.
Incident to Louisiana, the study (using 1992-2010
data) showed it did have one of the least polarized legislatures. But it also
revealed that the blanket primary had nothing to do with that, meaning other factors
such as political culture explain this.
So, the data don’t confirm Edwards’ claim and, if
we believe moderation a good in its own right, refuse to convey any advantage
to the blanket primary. But closed primaries do have an unqualified good: strengthening
political parties that bring greater responsibility and accountability to the
public. By creating incentives to judge electorally organizations that live or
die by election results, this forces greater adherence to the public median
ideology. In contrast, candidates less moored to party fortunes who emphasize
more their personal appeal than issue preferences have increased ability to deviate
in their actions from that median position.
In short, the personalistic, issue-diluted
Louisiana political environment from which Edwards and other elected officials sprang
would transform with stronger parties, encouraged by closed primaries that give
their ideological platforms greater prominence in a vote decision for a
candidate. That’s why Edwards and these others, who have greater ability to deviate
from the public on issues because of this environment, never will see a “benefit”
from a closed primary system, because it threatens their political careers.
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