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Big E's avatar

Very nice work presenting all sides of this issue, Brian.

As I understand it, PCs are elected and represent the people. Clubs represent the clubs and by definition special interests (and, yes, those special interests could overlap with the PCs too).

Your point about double representation is a good one. Anyone could form a club, demand voting rights, and then get a voting seat on the Executive Board of the State Central Committee under these rules.

As an old person, I’m not in one of these clubs, but I worked hard for Republicans and liberty candidates. (Just like Ryan Spoon, though not as effectively.) Should I form an Old Republicans Club and then be eligible for a voting seat on the Executive Board of the State Central Committee? No, I should not -- unless I begin as an elected PC.

Given what you’ve presented here and what I’ve seen with special interests taking over a party (and the government at large), the rule change should happen and no special compromises made. Idaho should follow the other states in this regard.

P.S. An “org chart” illustrating all these memberships and relationships would be most helpful.

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Hari Heath's avatar

Good article that covers the ground well. Some correction, the state central committee is made up of four people from each county, Chairman, State Committeewoman, State Committeeman, Youth Committee person, plus the chair of each legislative district plus the executive committee.

While you stated it correctly, some of those arguing against the rule change claim they will lose a seat at the table. The three groups remain on the EC and would still have a voice, not a vote if changed.

There are some additional issues such as internal conflicts within the Republican women who excluded some of their local chapters from participating recently.

These groups do contribute to the party and are valuable members, but they are privately organized outside of the party. This is not a new proposal. An identical rule change has been proposed at least twice over the years, so it is not a new response by the new "establishment."

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