Civility

Clean 2019 Elections Jumpstart A Year of Voting in 2020 by Matthew Weil

This post was originally on the BPC blog.

The off-year election results will be dissected by analysts for cues about what it portends for the next year of campaigning. I’m more interested about what it means for administering good elections and ensuring the legitimacy of the process.  

No election is perfect. Throughout the country, there were reports about voting technology not working correctlypens for marking ballots without inkvoters receiving the wrong ballots, and results websites going down. These are issues that no election administrator ever wants to see happen to their voters. But they happen, and those same administrators have every incentive to rectify the issues as quickly as possible.  

Even when officials can point to the source of the problem and its solution, candidates affected by those races have been quick to cry foul and “fraud” with no evidence, which serves to undermine confidence in the legitimacy of the outcome. There will be many more opportunities during the 2020 primaries and general election for candidates to attack the process—often without any tangible proof—to further their positions when they perceive they may be on the losing end of a contest.  

But these baseless threats to election legitimacy damage the process and weaken our governing institutions. Elected officials, administrators, candidates, and even the press must be hyperaware of how their comments impact the voting experience. 

For the most part, overnight reporting on the 2019 election did not reveal many accusations of nefarious activities. It is worth it, however, to point out two examples to show how candidates and officials can unnecessarily undermine confidence during the election process with just a few statements.  

Kentucky’s gubernatorial election is incredibly close. In fact, the various news agencies that typically declare winners based on statistical models have not yet made a call on the outcome. The process for recounts and contests in Kentucky is fairly clear. The losing candidate can request a recanvass of the vote, followed by a full recount.  

Why then did Governor Bevins, who is currently trailing in the vote count decide to cite otherwise unsubstantiated “irregularities” as the reason for his decision not to concede the election?  

He has every right to not concede and to follow the process as defined by state law and could have framed his hesitation that way. But the feint to fraud is unnecessary and likely serves as a whistle to supporters to question the legitimacy of the election if he ultimately loses. 

Similarly, the American system of elections has developed in most states to position the secretary of state as the chief election official. That’s how it is in Kentucky. In this case, the Democratic secretary of state, Alison Lundergan Grimes, who is responsible for much of the elections process, decided to appear on live television while election returns were still being received by the counties and compiled by the state to declare that the Democratic nominee had won the gubernatorial election.  

I have had the privilege to know many secretaries of state. The idea that these officials “call” elections is just wrong and disappointing to see. Doing so while in her position will lead many to question the objectivity of her office in administering any recanvass or recount.  

However, most of what happened yesterday provides reason to cheer. Voter turnout exceeded expectations even where administrators were planning for higher than normal turnout. Voters even went to polling places when their jurisdictions were not having elections yesterday

Americans want to make their voices heard. It’s incumbent on those responsible for running a fair process and those battling for hearts and minds to remember that it all means nothing if the process is deemed illegitimate.

Remarks on Civility by Matthew Weil

Illinois Campaign for Political Reform (ICPR) Event: Can Civility be Restored in Politics?

August 16 @ 12:00pm (CT) - 1:30pm (CT)

Columbia College, Ferguson Hall, 600 S Michigan Avenue, Chicago

 

Prepared remarks for delivery

Thank you for inviting me to be here with you today. Recent events and the daily onslaught of fresh political bickering certainly serve as constant reminders that we have to do better as a country when it comes to resolving our disagreements.

I will admit that when I was asked to sit on this panel I was—at first—a little confused. I know about the political brinksmanship and stalemate that has paralyzed Illinois in recent years, and I have previously participated in an event hosted by the Illinois Campaign for Political Reform focusing on efforts to reform the redistricting process where I was positioned quite literally between the two opposing sides of the debate. But inviting the guy from Washington, DC who grew up in New Jersey and went to school in Philadelphia to speak about restoring civility? That was unexpected!

But inviting the guy from Washington, DC who grew up in New Jersey and went to school in Philadelphia to speak about restoring civility? That was unexpected!

Let me talk very briefly about why I think I am here today. I have spent my entire career in Washington, DC. I have worked for a right-leaning public policy think tank. I have been a federal civil servant working on nonpartisan election administration issues, and I was a political appointee in the Obama Administration. Maybe I am rare, but I have friends on the right and left with whom I can agree or disagree about policy without becoming personal and petty.

Today I am the Associate Director of the Democracy Project at the Bipartisan Policy Center. I know what many of you are quietly thinking because I have heard all of the questions and comments before. What does a “bipartisan” think tank do? Do you have any effect or success? Are you really bipartisan? How can you be on both sides of an issue today?

The Bipartisan Policy Center, or BPC, is a nonprofit organization in Washington that combines the best ideas from both parties to promote health, security, and opportunity for all Americans. BPC drives principled and politically viable policy solutions through the power of rigorous analysis, painstaking negotiation, and aggressive advocacy. That’s our mission.

Here’s how explain the work BPC does in my own words. On almost every issue at the federal and state level, there are competing priorities that must be reconciled during the policy development process. Before being enacted, both major political parties often have significant ability to slow or derail the political debate, even when one side has a substantial majority over the other. And the best policy tends to be created by compromising rather than attempting to run rough shod over one’s political opponent. That said, we live in a very polarized political environment. So BPC brings together strong Ds and strong Rs to work on not a middling solution but one that true partisans are willing to sell to their colleagues.

BPC is a relatively large institution that works on issues related to the economy, energy, financial institutions, governance, health, housing, immigration, infrastructure, and national security. My main focuses are on governing institutions and election administration.

Back in 2013 and 2014 BPC convened the Commission on Political Reform, chaired by former Senate Majority Leaders Trent Lott and Tom Daschle, former Senator Olympia Snowe, and former Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman. The commission included other former members, governors, business and religious leaders and more. The 62 unanimous recommendations this group of 29 individuals made were all aimed at ameliorating the causes and consequences of America’s partisan political divide while advocating specific reforms that will improve the political process.

Without reading to you all 62 recommendations, I will note that they fall roughly into three buckets: electoral system reform, congressional reform, and a call to service. And I am happy to shed more light onto the specifics during the question and answer session.

The Bipartisan Policy Center is also in the midst of what we are calling a summer of civility. To quote from some of our former CPR co-chairs, “[w]e are not under any illusion that these problems can be quickly changed, and we are not naively calling for an end to partisanship. We are, however, challenging all Americans to listen to each other more, and to be more open to others’ perspectives. Members of Congress are gathering to sign a Commitment to Civility, pledging to act with respect and collegiality toward one another.” To that end we helped to gather the Freshman class of representatives from both parties to sign a commitment to civility pledge at the U.S. Capitol in June 2017.

Also in 2014, the Bipartisan Policy Center took on the continuing work of the Presidential Commission on Election Administration, which was appointed by President Obama to improve the voting experience. The commission, co-chaired by President Obama’s campaign attorney and Governor Romney’s campaign attorney, took seriously its work looking at bipartisan solutions to America’s voting woes in areas the parties can truly agree.

Finally, the Bipartisan Policy Center hosts a Governor’s Council. BPC initially convened its Governor’s Council in 2011 to bring the pragmatism that most governors bring to governing to Washington. They have issued recommendations related to workforce, higher education, Medicaid, and opioid abuse. We are honored that Linda Lingle, a former governor of Hawaii and most recently the COO of Illinois, remains a member of our council.

Thank you for the opportunity to discuss the work we do at BPC, and I look forward to the panel’s discussion and questions from the audience.