Primary Responsibility
Choose now or have no choice later.
By Jeff Knox
(May 16, 2014) Primary season is in full swing and most of America hasn’t even noticed. Primaries have already been conducted in some states and are imminent in many more. Primaries are the single point in the electoral process where you have the most influence and your vote has the most leverage. During the primaries, not only do relatively few voters participate, but because there are often several candidates for a given office, the votes are spread out, meaning that a very small number of votes can make the difference between winning and losing. Some states run two-stage primaries, holding a runoff between the top vote-getters if no one receives better than 50% of the votes cast in the first ballot.
For some unfathomable reason, the National Rifle Association does not grade or endorse candidates in contested primaries. This often contributes to really good, pro-Second Amendment candidates being narrowly defeated, leaving voters in the general election to pick between “bad” and “worse.” Other national rights organizations, such as Gun Owners of America, get involved in primaries, but they have less reach and fewer resources than does the NRA. Many local grassroots organizations that could have an impact are structured as 501(c) organizations and are forbidden by law from actively participating in electoral politics.