| John Palmer | San Francisco Chronicle, Letters to the Editor |

Regarding “A Republican governor in heavily Democratic California? We should end the top-two primary” (Open Forum, SFChronicle.com, Feb. 23): Yes, the top-two primary has flaws. When one party has too many candidates, it creates anxiety and triggers insider pressure for some to drop out.

But here’s my prediction: Two Republicans will not prevail this year in the governor’s race. Democratic candidates will be nudged out, endorsements will line up, and the field will consolidate — as it always does. We’ve seen this movie before.

Returning to closed primaries would be worse. It would hand power back to low-turnout partisan electorates and sideline the roughly 1 in 5 Californians registered with no party preference. In a state where Republicans haven’t won a statewide office since 2006, the real election would become the June primary — decided by the most ideological voters.

The full array of choices

We shouldn’t scrap the system. We should improve it.

For a single-seat office like governor, California should adopt ranked-choice voting in the primary to advance the top five candidates, then use ranked choice again in November to ensure a majority winner. That would reduce insider “candidate suppression” and give voters the full array of choices.

Instead of empowering party bosses, let’s empower voters.

John Palmer, San Francisco

Read full article

Categories: