For several months newspaper editorial boards from every part of Colorado have been opining against the various recall efforts underway or under consideration by right-wing activists around the state. There are now more than a dozen editorials from across Colorado encouraging readers to “just say no” to signing a recall petition. Here’s a quick look at some of the most recent offerings:
From the Denver Post:
This summer we urge Colorado voters to decline to sign recall petitions for three elected officials.
These men and women – Gov. Jared Polis, Sen. Brittany Pettersen of Lakewood, and Sen. Pete Lee of Colorado Springs – have done nothing nefarious, or illegal or untoward. Rather, they face recalls for their votes, or in the case of the governor his signature, on issues the petition gatherers disagree with.
These are not matters that should be decided by a special election. These are issues that should be decided by the next regular election. That’s how our Democracy works – someone is elected for a term and barring some exceedingly rare and horrendous action on the part of an elected official, they serve that term until the next election. Then voters can have their say.
Recalls are not meant to be do-over elections.
From the Colorado Springs Business Journal:
Recall elections come with a massive price tag, and not just in terms of dollars and cents.
It’s difficult to pinpoint how much a special election — the process required under Colorado Secretary of State rules — costs on a statewide level. However, in Colorado Springs alone as recently as April, the cost of a citywide special election was estimated at a half-million dollars. It stands to reason the cost of recalling a statewide official like the governor would be exponentially higher.
[mantra-pullquote align=”right” textalign=”left” width=”60%”]“It’s far better to rein in the recalls and stop the silliness now, for the sake of good governance, for our business climate and for our state’s future.”[/mantra-pullquote]
And that’s an untenable investment to ask of taxpayers, especially when you consider that special elections historically have low voter turnout.
Recall costs aside, the process is also disruptive to good governance. When lawmakers must constantly step lightly in order to avoid losing their jobs, what chance do they have to draft thoughtful or change-making legislation? How can we expect any level of productivity?
And from the Colorado Springs Independent:
It’s a sniveling threat from some far-right interests, and it’s all because the Legislature passed and the governor signed some very progressive policies during the 2019 session.
Which leaves us with a question. At what point did we become a selfish, whiny society that has made it easier to threaten to take someone’s job away than to admit you made a mistake and change it when the opportunity arises?…
…So rather than find better candidates and prepare them for victory in 2020 and beyond, they’re whining and threatening those who are doing the job for one simple fact: They’re. Doing. Their. Jobs. When it swings back to the right, what’s to stop the far left from doing the same thing?
You get the idea. From the Pueblo Chieftain and the Greeley Tribune to the Durango Herald and the Grand Junction Sentinel, the conclusion has been the same: This recall madness is wrong and it needs to stop.
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Writing an editorial is like wetting your pants in a blue serge suit. You feel warm all over and nobody notices.
While I have no direct experience that might verify the accuracy of your simile, editorials are in fact not that useful until someone reads.
And that's why people share them.
Fuck off Sore losers!!
With no sense of irony, a Wray woman who carries her Polis Recall sign-up clipboard to church informed me the Mueller hearings are just because we Democrats are a bunch of sore losers.
Michael, irony is dead. Deader than dead. It's the dead horse people like that woman you mentioned flog relentlessly.
Once Irony had caught a peek at all those bright lights of the Yuma tractor dealership, there was no way it was ever gonna’ stick around Wray . . .
. . . Two Petitions, Verses 14 – 15