Filed Under:  National, Politics

SoS races are important

22nd August 2022   ·   0 Comments

By Julianne Malveaux
TriceEdneyWire.com Columnist

Democrats play checkers, and Republicans play chess. That’s why the Reagan Revolution, which kicked off in 1980, worked. President Ronald Reagan pledged to trim government bureaucracy, install conservatives into administrative government positions, and deliver a conservative agenda. He didn’t do it in a day or a week; it took years for his plan to take hold.

Newt Gingrich’s Contract on America, introduced in the 1994 congressional campaign, successfully ushered a Republican congressional majority, even though President Bill Clinton was the Democratic leader. Their theme – reduce taxes, enact welfare reform, and cut the size of government. In the nearly thirty years since the Contract on America (they called it the Contract for America, but it was an attack on America) was implemented, its strange fruit is still being harvested.

Conservative Republicans have become rabid co-signers of the putrid agenda of the 45th president of the United States. Republicans who know better have chosen to be quiet in the face of neo-fascist election deniers who prefer winning to integrity. These folks think long-term, while Democrats prefer to indulge in internecine squabbling, short-term thinking, and unfocused resistance.

Thus, the Democratic focus on mid-term elections has not sufficiently amplified Biden’s victories, and there are many. More importantly, Dems have been far more focused on the top of the ticket than the bottom. Election deniers are running for state and local offices, and electing them will have ramifications in 2022 and 2024. The. Democratic National Committee needs to spend money focusing on some of these down-ballot elections. Congressional and Senate races are important. So are secretaries of state.

In most states, the secretary of state determines how elections are run. They choose the voting machine vendors and decide on election rules regarding early voting, mail-in voting, and more. They certify election results. That’s why the former president called Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, asking him to “find” enough votes to overturn President Biden’s narrow victory in that state. Raffensperger declined to meddle in the election results, which resulted in the former President endorsing his opponent in the May Georgia primary.

That hasn’t stopped the former president and his allies from their election denial. And it has not prevented the twice-impeached president from endorsing his supporters who might alter the course of future elections.

Secretaries of State certify election results. The former president’s allies, supported by him, will likely bend the rules to “find” votes to prevail in upcoming elections.

Republican Jim Merchant is the Republican nominee for Secretary of State in Nevada. He is also the founder of the American First Secretary of State Coalition. Not surprisingly, this group advocates same-day voting only, purging voting rolls, and other measures to limit voting rights. There are twenty-seven Secretary of State elections this year. Currently, 22 Republicans are Secretaries of State, compared to 20 Democrats. Every Republican Secretary of State has not pledged allegiance to the 45th president.

Raffensperger is proof enough of that. Still, the Republican Party has imposed a loyalty oath on those who value integrity over the favor of a cult-like former president. How many have the courage of Raffensperger to resist the siren call of the former president?

Too many voters look at the top of the ticket and no further. In ignoring Secretary of State elections, they are turning the future over to the election deniers who have already said what they will do in 2024. They will change the rules, purge the voting rolls, and “find” how many votes the former President needs to win.

Democrats cede the future to those Republicans playing the long game by promoting election-denying Secretaries of State. When Democrats play checkers, we allow the chess players to claim the victory.

This article originally published in the August 22, 2022 print edition of The Louisiana Weekly newspaper.

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