Friday, December 30, 2022

Keep Secret Ballots in the Nebraska Unicameral

     

     In school we learned about our Unicameral and how Nebraska’s political system is unique. As one of only two states to divide their Electoral College Votes, Nebraska voters are afforded a louder voice in Presidential elections. And arguably affords Nebraska voters the most empowered voice of any state legislature. As governor, Bob Kerry worked with Unicameral Senators. Kerry also served 12 years in the U.S. Senate. When asked, he shared that in creating the Unicameral, Norris “led the successful effort to terminate both of these institutions with a constitutional amendment that abolished one of the legislative bodies and ended the practice of identifying a candidate’s political party on the ballot. Together, these two have given Nebraskans the most efficient and responsive legislature in the Country.”

Nebraskan George Norris served in the U.S. Senate from 1913 to 1933. His legacy includes the creation of our Unicameral. Norris’ ‘Rubber & Glass Campaign’ fought for the Unicameral because it made elected officials more accountable to voters, tamped down party influence, held the governor’s office in check, and thwarted special interest groups.

Today, the vast majority of Americans view our political system as untrustworthy. PEW Research finds only 7% of conservatives and 32% of Centrist Democrats trust government.

After Watergate, Congress responded with efforts to make governance more transparent. Research found that that elected officials motivations and behaviors changed but not for the better (Zelizer). Officials took positions based upon polls, media attention, and manipulating the appearance of their actions to appease voters (Heclo). Cross-aisle engagement and compromise went down as partisan rhetoric demonizing the opposition went up and divides got deeper (Fiorina). Supporting and passing legislation was bogged down as partisans punished officials for deviations from the party line. Instead of governing, elected officials focused on reelection in lieu of tackling tough issues and making hard choices.  Statesmen morphed into politicians as Political Action Committees (PACs) and special interest groups successfully drowned out the voice of voters with big donations by funding campaigns of compliant candidates, and, as we saw in 2022, let the wealthy exploit anonymous Dark Money campaigns to run brutally negative ads against others such as those ran against Brett Linstrom and Tony Vargas.

Since its inception, 85 years ago, the nonpartisan Unicameral has voted secretly for the body’s leadership. Next week a motion is expected that will make these votes public.  This would be the culmination of an effort pushed by the Nebraska First PAC. Nebraska First was founded and funded by Trump endorsed, unsuccessful gubernatorial candidate Charles W. Herbster.

Lead by Rod Edwards, Nebraska First argues, “Electing leadership by a secret and unrecorded ballot deprives everyday Nebraskans of information they could use when deciding who to elect as their state senator. Additionally, keeping the leadership votes a secret gives even more power and influence to lobbyists, special interests, and Capitol insiders. Most citizens are not aware of this practice and most would not support the secrecy if they knew.

Sounds reasonable, or does it?

When the nation’s founders met to write the U.S. Constitution, they cloaked the windows and forbid transcripts of the process so that participants could act and speak freely. Those who participated-in composing the Constitution, a document written and debated in secret, include George Washington, James Madison, Benjamin Franklin, and Roger Sherman. Of the 55 that participated, 40 had or would serve in a legislative body.

Along with Maine, Nebraska is the most moderate state in the Union. Certainly the officially nonpartisan Unicameral and the diminished role of political parties factors in to the calm and uniquely rational nature of Nebraska politics.

Today, officials bemoan the ‘brain drain’ as young Nebraskan’s move for work to other states. Over the last four years I have read approximately 1000 essays that asked students to describe America in 25 years. By very large numbers, their essays describe a failed political system, inequality, and an unhealthy cynicism of ever achieving the American Dream. Nationally, those under 40 prefer socialism to capitalism. If we’re serious about slowing Nebraska’s brain drain, elevating vitriolic partisanship is exactly the wrong thing to do.

Today, I doubt most Nebraska could name the Unicameral Speaker: Mike Hilgers steps down to become State Attorney General in January. And yet, despite the fact Nebraska voters are 49% Republican, 28% Democrats, and 23% Other, the system has worked according to Norris’ plan since 1937. Unnecessary transparency will, as we’ve all seen in the U.S. Senate and Congress, strengthen political party control, increase partisan extremism, and gag voters.

Students of our model of self-governance know that the system was designed to be slow and inefficient: thereby forcing the political debate, negotiation, and compromise. By doing so, it gives voice to those in the minority and stops political extremism.

Nebraskans should listen to Mr. Herbster and ask themselves this question: Do you like what you seen in our Nation’s Capitol? Do you want our legislature to behave like the Congress” asks Bob Kerry.

Protect your vote and contact your State Senator today: https://nebraskalegislature.gov/senators/senator_find.php

Monday, December 12, 2022

Unicameral Politics, Signs, Symbols, and Morfeld

 

Since COVID, I’ve taken to walking. One neighbor proudly displays his Trump / Pence campaign sign from 2016. I noticed duct tape over ‘2016’ during the 2020 election cycle. More recently, ‘Pence’ got the duct tape treatment. One sign, three messages.

Traffic came to a stop behind a pick-up truck flying a profanity-laced flag, (proving PT Barnum’s point, “No one ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the masses”). To my right was a mini-van of kids heading to school. I noticed mom’s awkward moment dealing with the political vulgarity.

Sign, sign. Everywhere a sign. Blockin' out the scenery, breakin' my mind. Do this, don't do that. Can't you read the sign? (Five Man Electric Band).

In his book, Man and His Symbols, Carl Jung, a student of Freud and founder of Jungian Psychology wrote, “Man uses the spoken or written word to express the meaning of what he wants to convey.”  We love our symbols and signs by sharing them on our cars, in our yards, and on social media. Why?

Now, hey you, mister, can't you read? You got to have a shirt and tie to get a seat inside. You've got to have a membership card to get inside."

One theory is as respected members of a group, we are more secure and assured of our place in society. Almost every characteristic you use to define you, (gender, religion, ethnicity, race, age, politics, education, city, state, et, al) comes with a group imposing expectations that judge the legitimacy of your membership in the group.

However, sometimes groupthink goes too far. Senator Krysten Sinema publicly revoked partisan affiliation because she claimed, party demands compromised her integrity. Similar concerns over unhealthy partisanship have been signaled by Paul Ryan, John Boehner, George Will, Liz Cheney, Jeff Flake, Mitt Romney, and the congressional bipartisan Problem Solvers (including Don Bacon).

And the sign said, "Anybody caught trespassin' will be shot on sight. So I jumped on the fence and I yelled at the house, "Hey! What gives you the right? If God was here, he'd tell you to your face, 'Man, you're some kind of sinner”

One neighbor erected more than a dozen flagpoles. Most commemorated NASCAR drivers but included in the mix was the Gadsden ‘don’t tread on me’ flag. Created by Benjamin Franklin, the Gadsden flag signaled a warning against the authoritarian rule of England’s King George III. What was a patriotic message against government overreach recently became starkly unpatriotic. This ideology was commandeered by those seeking to “terminate” the Constitution including a former authoritarian President and Congressman Paul Gosar. In addition, The Conservative Political Action Committee (CPAC), recently awarded Hungary’s illiberal Prime Minister, Viktor Orban’ with two addresses. Why are those claiming patriotism giving a platform to an authoritarian dictator? What sign are they sending?

A report by International IDEA (*1) finds that authoritarianism is rising worldwide and affecting long-stable democracies including 17 European nations, as well as 7 nations in the Americans, along with, Japan, Australia, Taiwan, and the United States.

Today, the greatest danger to our model of self-governance is those who lie and conspire to deceive others by perpetuating false claims of election fraud. The foundation of American self-governance rests upon our trust and faith to rule ourselves through free and fair elections. By undermining the legitimacy of those elected, and thereby our faith in self-governance, election deniers promote authoritarian nationalism. These are the ideas that drove your forefathers to emigrate to these shores for freedom and that brave Americans “gave their last full measure of devotion” fighting against in the 1770s, 1812, 1860s, throughout the 20th century, and in the war against terrorism. 

Sign, sign. Everywhere a sign. Blockin' out the scenery, breakin' my mind. Do this, don't do that. Can't you read the sign?

Over the last year, four unicameral senators spoke to the Omaha Free Speech Society. Their depth of knowledge and lack of partisan point-taking was refreshing. George Norris got it right when he removed partisanship from Nebraska’s unicameral. Thankfully, Nebraska Senator Adam Morfeld has launched a group to fight extremism and misinformation in Nebraska. Godspeed Mr. Morfeld. (*2)

And the sign said, "Everybody welcome. Come in, kneel down and pray. So I got me a pen and a paper and I made up my own little sign, I said, "Thank you, Lord, for thinkin' 'bout me, I'm alive and doin' fine"

 

For link:

(*1) Omaha World Herald, 12/7/2022, Jan M Olson

Report: Authoritarianism on rise as democracy weakens

 

(*2) Omaha World Herald, 12/7/2022, Martha Stoddard

Senator launches group to fight extremism and misinformation