Arizona election activists sue lawmakers for lack of measure clarity
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(Arizona News Connection) A bipartisan group backing a ballot measure to allow open primaries in Arizona contends lawmakers are working to intentionally mislead voters about the initiative.
Make Elections Fair Arizona is suing state lawmakers who wrote a description of its initiative for voter information pamphlets the group said will only lead to confusion.
Sarah Smallhouse, chair of Make Elections Fair Arizona, said her group suggested word changes but the Arizona Legislative Council did not accept them. Instead, the council's wording said the initiative could allow for ranked choice voting, which it does not require. Smallhouse noted ranked choice voting faces opposition primarily from Arizona GOP supporters.
"This initiative is arguably the most important reform in our lifetime," Smallhouse emphasized. "It's time to do right by Arizona. It's time to start fixing things. It's time to make elections fair."
Smallhouse argued the council has a conflict of interest, as its members benefit from the current closed-primary system. She claimed the council is trying to dissuade voters, in order to keep things as they are. The lawsuit seeks to keep the council's summary from appearing in voter information pamphlets. Lawmakers contended the description was written fairly through a nonpartisan process.
Make Elections Fair Arizona said its measure boils down to treating all Arizona voters and all candidates equally.
Pat DeConcini, co-chair of the group, said with the current system, elected officials are incentivized to not compromise, which he thinks puts democracy in jeopardy.
"In a system that we have today of democracy, compromise is the grease in the gears that make the whole thing work," DeConcini contended. "I think we would all agree that our system's broken, and so, we have to do something to solve the problem."
DeConcini called the initiative a solution to political gridlock. While backers of the Make Elections Fair Arizona Act are taking lawmakers to court over the written description, they aren't the only ones doing so. Proponents of the Arizona for Abortion Access Act have filed suit for a description they said will hurt support for their ballot measure in November.