Single-issue voting is only dumb when other people do it

John Deeth is fed up with “narrow-focus ‘progressives’ [who] apply tests of absolute purity on their pet issues,” and in so doing “lost touch with bigger picture values.” The hard-fought Democratic primary for Johnson County supervisor was Deeth’s trigger. Some locals are trying to oust Supervisor Janelle Rettig over a 2013 zoning vote. Deeth thinks it’s unfair to toss out a longtime progressive leader over one issue.

I haven’t closely followed the Johnson County campaign. I think highly of Rettig and Mike Carberry, one of the other Democratic candidates, but know too little about the other candidates to form an opinion. I think it’s reasonable and even admirable for people to be concerned about land use, and specifically the rampant suburban sprawl that is swallowing farmland in growing metro areas like Iowa City. We’ve got too much retail space per capita already, as well as vacant lots in many cities, but it seems like every time you turn around there’s another strip mall or subdivision going in on prime farmground. That’s not a narrow-focus issue from my perspective, even if some of the Johnson County activists are motivated by a Not In My Backyard syndrome.

Deeth’s diatribe against narrow-focus progressives caught my attention because he has been known to support city council candidates over single issues such as the 21-only bar rule or the importance of having student representation in Iowa City’s local government. CORRECTION: Deeth says he’s never cast a single-issue vote against an incumbent because of the local ordinance keeping people under age 21 out of bars.

Single-issue voters often look ridiculous when you don’t share their passion. I remember talking with a frustrated political volunteer who was spending a general election season in Iowa. He was sick of nurses who line up with Democrats on almost all the issues (health care, safety net spending, education, etc.) but planned to keep voting Republican because they were anti-choice. I couldn’t disagree with them more on the choice issue, but who am I to say their priorities are wrong? They are adults and have the right to decide what’s most important in a candidate.

I’m rarely in a position to consider becoming a single-issue voter, because most of the time one candidate clearly aligns more with me on a wide range of policies. I’d never vote out an incumbent for the sole reason that s/he didn’t support letting 19-year-olds hang out with their friends in college bars. On the other hand, I have voted for or against Windsor Heights City Council candidates based solely on whether they favor new sidewalks. I don’t care if you’re a wonderful person and good Democrat and dedicated volunteer anymore–you’re not getting my vote in Windsor Heights unless you recognize that putting sidewalks on some key streets would improve safety, public health, and the quality of life. There’s no way to move forward besides replacing one or more city council members. If that’s unfair to some otherwise good public servants, so be it.

What do you think, Bleeding Heartland readers? Are you or have you ever been a single-issue voter? Would any one mistake inspire you to vote out an otherwise solid incumbent?

About the Author(s)

desmoinesdem

  • So much to be said

    I expect Janelle Rettig to win the primary.  I like Lisa Green-Douglass, but I don’t live in Johnson County so I can’t vote on the matter.  

    Single issue voting is going to become more prevalent in primaries because there is so little difference between candidates that think they have to bend over backwards to match party orthodoxy.

    I think the goal of any Board of Supervisors should be to build consensus and make people feel like their community is not being discriminated against.  Green-Douglass has built contacts in and outside of Iowa City, this is why I would presume that she could build the necessary consensus.  Empty malls and unused development projects can be a depressing sight, no question about it.  

  • Allow me to retort

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?…

    While I’ve fixated on some odd issues in my life, I don’t think I’ve vast any single issue votes against candidates on the Iowa City 21 Bar issue. The candidates I supported in 2013 all supported 21 – and I privately told them I understood because I knew it would have been political suicide to do otherwise. I did stop supporting Matt Hayek over it but that was more of a trust thing. In 2007 he took a Let The Voters Decide stance and when the voters chose to keep 19, he decided he wanted a do-over. So I didn’t support him in 2011, also the year that had the strongest student candidate in decades, Raj Patel.

    Yep, I voted for some no-chance students in 2009. The other options were two old-guard townies who I would not backed in any circumstances, or a write-in. The three-plus decade lack of representation in city government for a third of the city’s population is a serious and systemic problem that deserves serious discussion. And the drinking age deserves the kind of serious debate that drug reform is getting.

    As a 50 year old who doesn’t even drink, I have no personal stake in these issues.

    That’s not the case with some of the faux environmentalists in Johnson County, who moved into a really nice spot and want to lock the door behind them. Janelle Rettig has a strong and broad environmental record, yet is being attacked as “anti-bike” because of ONE vote on ONE subdivision. The neighbors doing the attacking have a self-interest. Mike Carberry is a good environmentalist but he’s been to quick to share the attacks. So my second vote went to Green-Douglass.

    • In fairness

      There was one time where I cast a completely single issue vote: the 2000 presidential election. And a lot of good progressives struggled with Nader vs. Gore in the fall of 2000 (remember Nader Trader?). It wasn’t till post-Florida that Nader voters became pariahs.

    • fair enough

      correcting post on your 21 bar issue voting.

      I don’t know the details on this land use issue, and it’s clearly ridiculous to call Janelle Rettig “anti-bike.” People base votes on things they have a “personal stake” in all the time (free preschool, lower taxes, more sidewalks), so I don’t think that alone discounts points raised by the people you call faux environmentalists.

Comments