Thursday, October 12, 2017

More CAGOP-e Failure: Republican Local Leaders Bought to Support Top Two

The stupidity of the Republican "leadership" hurts.

I call them the CAGOP-e, or the California GOP establishment.

It hurts really bad, and it is hurting our partisan political process.

Men and women no longer real choice in their elections.

The argument that the Top Two Jungle Primary would create more moderate candidates and requiring them to reach across the aisle and compete for votes from other political parties.

The exact opposite has occurred, of course. More left-wing, progressive candidates are eating out our civic culture, ignoring the needs of California citizens, doing the bidding of vocal, rabid interest groups rather than listening to the voters.

In some cases, a general election runoff between two Democrats has allowed otherwise disenfranchised Republicans an opportunity to make a difference.

The better approach to doing better in California, however, rests on Republican reaching out to communities and making the difference to the individual residents and local interests. How about standing true to principles and values, and then registering voters in turn, in connection with those values? How about working with President Trump and his agenda, and showing how MAGA works for everyone?

Nope. Instead, Republican elected "leaders" are more interested in going along with the slow yet "inevitable" decline of the California Republican Party, as if there is nothing more that can be done.

Nonsense across the board.

Check out this latest appeal to authority as another failed argument for keeping Top Two:


 
Dear Delegate,

By this time, you have heard arguments for and against the existing top two primary system framed in the context of its impact on legislative races. We thought it important for you to hear from those of us who have to run locally in open primaries and proven that when Reagan-Republican conservatism is properly explained, we can, and do, win in top two elections.

As local elected officials, we are required in top two elections to reach out and build our conservative coalition early in the election process. Under these rules, Republicans actually hold over 1200 city and county offices, almost equal to the number of Democrats. We, your local elected officials, are rebuilding our party from the ground up.

Republican candidates learning to win votes across party lines under top two rules isn't just a good thing - it's a necessity for Republicans in Democrat-dominated California. But now, some are arguing that we should eliminate the top two primary for our legislative and statewide candidates, as if just talking to ourselves until the general election will somehow make it easier to win in November.

Republican friends, as local elected officials, we cannot stress enough that this effort to repeal the top two primary is short-sighted and will hurt the future growth of our party. Simply changing the rules won't grow our party, it will just send a message that we want to disenfranchise the fastest growing group of voters in California - NPP's and decline to states-- making it harder for us to reach out and win in the future.

We urge you to reject efforts to repeal the top two primary. Local elected Republicans are proving that with our conservative message, we can reach out and win across party lines. That's how we will win again at the legislative and statewide level.

Sincerely,
Jesus Andrade
Council Member, City of Stockton
Jesse Armendarez
Council Member, City of Fontana
Mike Diaz
Council Member, City of Chula Vista
John Franklin
Deputy Mayor, City of Vista
Johnny Khamis
Council Member, City of San Jose
Linda Lindholm, Board Member,
Orange County Board of Education
Alan Nakanishi
Council Member, City of Lodi
Bob Nunez
Council Member, City of Milpitas
Peter Ohtaki
Vice Mayor, City of Menlo Park
Brian Raymond
Council Member, City of Atwater
Rich Silverman
Council Member, City of Manteca
Bernadette Suarez
Council Member, City of Lawndale
Ashley Swearengin
Mayor, 2009-2016, City of Fresno
Kirk Uhler
Supervisor, Placer County
Roland Velasco
Mayor, City of Gilroy
Acquanetta Warren
Mayor, City of Fontana
Lupe Ramos Watson
Council Member, City of Indio
Chuck Winn
Supervisor, San Joaquin County

Who cares who any of these people are?
Really?

I do not care what office they hold.

The Top Two has been an unmitigated disaster for the state party, and for the democratic process 
across the board.

We as voters, we as Republicans, must take back our partisan primaries and re-establish control 
over who gets elected.

This Top Two stuff needs to stop.

We need to allow for multiple parties to reference their preferences. We need real options, 
whether we win or lose.

Or else:


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