This post was first published in the Wilson Times May 18, 2019
Events this week have made
it clear that it’s party affiliation (or even suspicion of partisanship), not
competence, that matters in North Carolina government. On Monday, the recently
reconstituted State Board of Elections summarily fired its executive director,
Kim Strach, and replaced her with a reliably Democratic director, Brinson Bell.
The vote was 4-3; four
Democrats voted to oust Strach, a veteran investigator and administrator, who
is registered as an unaffiliated voter. Three Republicans on the board opposed
Strach’s ouster.
It was Strach who
investigated malfeasance in office by former Speaker of the House Jim Black,
former Commissioner of Agriculture Meg Scott Phipps, and former Gov. Mike
Easley, all Democrats. She proved herself to be a thorough and tenacious investigator
and a protector of North Carolina’s voters. More recently, Strach led the
effort to uncover a surreptitious and illegal absentee ballot scheme in the 9th
Congressional District, which resulted in the nullification of the 2018 general
election vote and nationwide headlines leading to a do-over election this year.
Apparently some Democrats
had been lying in wait for the opportunity to pay Strach back for the party’s
embarrassments of the Black, Phipps and Easley cases. All three of the
Democrats Strach investigated are out of politics, and all three paid the price
for their misdeeds. Strach caused some Republican embarrassment last year in
the 9th District, where the leading Republican candidate hired a
consultant known for his ballot stuffing work. She resisted GOP pressure to
back off the investigation of the absentee ballot scheme.
You would think that both
Democrats and Republicans would welcome anyone who could get to the bottom of
crooked politics and punish the perpetrators, thereby improving the reputation
of public officials.
But that’s not the way
politics work in this state in the 21st century. The GOP leadership
in the General Assembly made it clear that they would up the ante on the usual
“spoils” system of electoral politics. With a veto-proof majority in both
chambers, Republicans attempted to redefine the role of governor, stripping the
state’s highest-ranking official of most of his traditional powers. Republican
leaders decided they should take over the governor’s appointment powers for
state boards and commissions, including the State Board of Elections. Even
former Republican Gov. Pat McCrory, along with other former governors, opposed
the GOP legislature’s power grab. A long court fight ended with restoration of
the former rule that the SBOE would have a majority of members of the
governor’s party. That led to Monday’s vote to fire the state’s most successful
and recognizable elections official.
Less than 50 years ago, when
the Democratic Party dominated state politics, and the Democratic primary was
“tantamount to election,” the spoils system was not as blatant. Each new Democratic
governor got to appoint his supporters to various boards and commissions and
oust the former Democratic governor’s cronies, but there was not the rancor
that has taken over the simplest decisions of today. One-party rule was not a
vibrant democracy, but the gerrymandered super-majority in the legislature has
not been an improvement.
As another national election
approaches, North Carolina voters should have confidence that the people in
charge of elections are acting in a fair, non-partisan manner to protect their
sacred right to vote. The public must have confidence in the outcome of
elections. The widely condemned firing of Strach, whom SBOE chair Robert Cordle
(a Democrat) praised for doing an excellent job, tells voters that party labels
matter more than accomplishments.
Monday’s vote didn’t need to
happen that way. If Democrats on the State Board of Elections had viewed the
elections director decision as a test of good governance and protection of
election integrity, rather than an opportunity to slap down the opposing party,
they would have kept Strach as director of elections.
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