The Globe’s Chris Van Buskirk has a good piece on the push to eliminate party primaries in Massachusetts – and how it’s dividing state Democrats. … Did you know that former Gov. Deval Patrick is among those supporting the move to non-partisan primaries in the state? I’m impressed. … But here’s a non-surprise: many progressives (though not all) are against the switch. Can you blame them? They love the current status quo precisely because it gives them a disproportionately large influence over the state Democratic Party — a party that represents only 25 percent of enrolled voters and yet controls all six statewide elected offices and 11 Congressional seats while maintaining a super-majority in a Massachusetts Legislature that’s been dominated by Dems since 1959. Today, winning election to an office in Massachusetts increasingly means winning a Dem primary, since the hapless MassGOP regularly doesn’t field candidates in general elections. So, yes, many progressives, such as Robert Kuttner, support the current party-primary system that’s contributed to 51 percent of all elections in Massachusetts going uncontested since 2014.* The current system has given progressives inordinate power. …
Do I think non-partisan primaries are the cure-all to the state’s current political and governmental woes? Nope. But it sure would shake things up in a state that desperately needs shaking up. I’ll let Danielle Allen, a Harvard professor and former gubernatorial candidate, explain the pluses of scrapping the current party-primary system (Globe). … I’ve previously harped on our flawed primary system here and here …
Btw: Jon Ellis at MassterList blasts away at the MassGOP’s attempt to eliminate competition in its own primary for governor. …
* The 51 percent figure via Danielle Allen’s Globe piece.

