Oregon’s Top Two Primary Measure Defeated
Portland, OR November 5, 2008 11:09 a.m.
Tuesday night, Oregon voters said they love parties.
Political parties, that is.
Oregonians voted ‘no’ on Proposition 65. The measure would have replaced the current political party-based primary system. Instead the two candidates who got the most votes – regardless of party – would have gone on to the general election.
With a little more than half of the ballots counted, the measure lost with "nos" running 65 percent, to 35 percent in favor.
Former Governor Barbara Roberts was one of lead opponents.
Gov. Barbara Roberts: “The system we have in place, the primary and general election system, works. We’re one of the highest turnout states in the nation, our votes get counted, nobody gets left out, minor party candidates are on the ballot. There’s just no reason to toss all that out.”
Two former Secretaries of State were the biggest supporters of the proposal.
But the state’s Democrats and Republican parties joined in opposition to it, and relatively little money was spent by either side.
© 2008 OPB
Post a Comment
You must be logged in to post.
Related articles
- The Election Turnout Data Is In: Oregon Is No. 3
- Elections Office Certifies November Results
- Hand Recount Turns Up Few Surprises
Related topics
Recent Comments
- Hitheringwaters on Will WiMAX Prevail Where WiFi Failed?
- Andrea on People Fine Tuning Social Networks To Meet Their Needs
- Jeff on Hood River Pear Growers Try Different Ways To Market

