A4 THE ASTORIAN • TuESdAy, NOvEmbER 9, 2021 OPINION editor@dailyastorian.com KARI BORGEN Publisher DERRICK DePLEDGE Editor Founded in 1873 SHANNON ARLINT Circulation manager JOHN D. BRUIJN Production manager CARL EARL Systems manager GUEST COLUMN Progressive Democrats win big P rogressives rule Oregon’s Demo- cratic Party, and they won big last week. In the courts, a judge’s initial report indicates that Oregon Republicans stum- bled badly in how they challenged the new boundaries for congressional dis- tricts, which were created by legislative Democrats. At the Oregon State Capitol, moderate Dem- ocratic state Sen. Betsy Johnson, of Scappoose, was bounced from her role as co-chair of the powerful Joint Ways and DICK Means Committee, which HUGHES handles money issues and writes the state bud- get. That move apparently was in response to her announcing she would leave the party next year to run for governor as an independent. Let’s start with the second item, although it is not surprising that Johnson would be removed – “canceled,” in her words – as a co-chair. Johnson has been a reliable Democratic vote on procedural issues in the Senate. But she has remained fiercely independent on policy legislation, including firearms, natural resources and environmental regulation – to the conster- nation of progressive Democrats. At times, that has publicly put Johnson at odds with House Speaker Tina Kotek, of Portland, who at this point arguably is the Demo- crats’ leading contender for governor and the most influential person in the Capitol. Senate President Peter Courtney, of Salem, announced the committee changes Thursday afternoon. Himself a moder- ate Democrat, Courtney first appointed Johnson and progressive Sen. Elizabeth Steiner Hayward, of Beaverton, in 2018 to jointly serve as Senate co-chairs of Ways and Means. The pair proved a good team. Yet Courtney also later sidelined John- son when she stood in the way of progres- sives’ legislation to limit greenhouse gas emissions. As progressives have increased their numbers in the Senate Democratic caucus, they have pushed Courtney leftward. He has not said whether he will seek reelec- tion to the Senate next year. He already is both the longest-serving legislator and the longest-serving Senate president in Oregon history. Once Courtney left the presidency, whether by retiring or by being supplanted Facebook State Sen. Betsy Johnson, shown here at a #TimberUnity rally, was removed as co-chair of the Joint Ways and Means Committee. The senator has announced she will leave the Democratic Party and run for governor as an independent next year. ALTHOuGH IT IS NOT SuRPRISING THAT bETSy JOHNSON WOuLd bE REmOvEd – ‘CANCELEd,’ IN HER WORdS – AS A CO-CHAIR. JOHNSON HAS bEEN A RELIAbLE dEmOCRATIC vOTE ON PROCEduRAL ISSuES IN THE SENATE. buT SHE HAS REmAINEd FIERCELy INdEPENdENT ON POLICy LEGISLATION, INCLudING FIREARmS, NATuRAL RESOuRCES ANd ENvIRONmENTAL REGuLATION – TO THE CONSTERNATION OF PROGRESSIvE dEmOCRATS. by progressives, Johnson was unlikely to retain her Ways and Means role. Gallup recently reported that nationally, “The Democratic rank and file has long encompassed a wide diversity of perspec- tives, but the power center has shifted from moderates — who were the largest group in the early 2000s — to liberals, who are the largest group today.” That rings true in Oregon. Johnson, who brought a rural perspec- tive and business sense to budgeting, will remain on Ways and Means but not in leadership. Steiner Hayward is the Sen- ate co-chair. Progressive Rep. Dan Ray- field, D-Corvallis, is the House co-chair. Sen. Fred Girod, R-Lyons, who recently stepped down as the Senate Republican leader, remains the Senate co-vice chair. Back to redistricting: Senior Judge Henry Breithaupt is a retired Oregon Tax Court judge acting in this case as a special master. His report goes to the panel of five retired judges whom Supreme Court Chief Justice Martha Walters appointed to handle the Republicans’ lawsuit. Breithaupt’s tentative findings were that the congressional districts, passed during an acrimonious special legislative session in September and signed by Gov. Kate Brown, generally met legal criteria. He could be right – I’m not a lawyer – but his findings suggest that Republicans mounted a weak challenge. The state Department of Justice, in defending the plan, brought in three expert witnesses to one for the Republicans’ side, Dr. Thomas Brunell of the Univer- sity of Texas at Dallas. Breithaupt was not impressed with Brunell, writing: “While I find Dr. Brunell generally to be a credible witness, the methodology he employs, and therefore the conclusions he reached, lack credibility and are therefore unreliable. “Several of Dr. Brunell’s conclusions lack even a minimum of academic or methodological rigor. He was unprepared to testify about several components of his submissions.” Breithaupt also said the Republican petitioners provided insufficient evidence that their alternative map complied with statutory criteria. State law states, “No district shall be drawn for the purpose of favoring any political party, incumbent legislator or other person.” Independent analyses have indicated that the new congressional boundaries benefit Democrats to varying degrees. However, Breithaupt accepted the statistical argument from the state’s experts that any Democratic advantage would not be significant. Hmm. Why then, was the state’s Dem- ocratic congressional delegation — with a vested interest in the new boundaries — exerting so much pressure on Democratic legislative leaders? The congressional and legislative district maps were not put together in public, so what was being said behind closed doors? We might never know. Apparently, Democratic legislative leaders could not be forced to testify in this case. A legis- lative provision in the Oregon Constitu- tion states, “Nor shall a member for words uttered in debate in either house, be ques- tioned in any other place.” dick Hughes has been covering the Oregon political scene since 1976. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Just a thought I just read in tonight’s paper that Har- ney County now also wants to move to Idaho. Wouldn’t it be a lot simpler to just cede Washington, Multnomah and Clacka- mas counties to Washington state? That way Oregon could keep all of her farm, ranch and recreational areas, while at the same time redistributing her law- making powers to better represent the rural areas. Just a thought. WILLIAM BELL Astoria Distrust I LETTERS WELCOME Letters should be exclusive to The Astorian. Letters should be fewer than 250 words and must include the writ- er’s name, address and phone num- ber. You will be contacted to confirm authorship. All letters are subject to editing for space, grammar and factual accuracy. Only two letters per writer are allowed each month. Letters writ- ten in response to other letter writers should address the issue at hand and should refer to the headline and date the letter was published. Discourse should be civil. Send via email to editor@dai- lyastorian.com, online at bit.ly/astorian- letters, in person at 949 Exchange St. in Astoria or mail to Letters to the Editor, P.O. Box 210, Astoria, OR., 97103. t is sad to see that there are people who seem to think that Fox News is engaging in some kind of treason, as Troy Haskell does in “Distrust is the goal” (The Asto- rian, Nov. 2). The people who believe that are deluded. They listen to the drumbeat pounded out by the Democrat media echo cham- bers. I bet they do not actually listen to arguments from the two sides. They just hear the drumbeat. Here is some advice. Try turning on that program you claim is “spewing lies, hate and discontent.” See if you can spot any factual errors for yourself, before echo- ing the blanket statement coming from the likes of CNN. Yes, Fox News commentators are par- tisan, and sometimes strident. It is appar- ent. And overtly stated. They believe in the American dream. Haskell has the wrong idea about who is sowing the hate. I can point to so many blatant lies told by the current administra- tion that I cannot keep count. Yet we, most of the people of the United States of America, are not con- fused. We are not racist, nor any of the epi- thets used by the Democrat elite. This is a republic, not a fascist state that labels the loyal opposition as our own worst enemy, and seeks to shut them up. The current crop of Democrats should not be telling you how to think. Think for yourself. ROBERT LIDDYCOAT Seaside