Politics Oregon Gov candidates

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Who do you want to be the Next Governor?

  • Tina Kotek

    Votes: 14 48.3%
  • Betsy Johnson

    Votes: 7 24.1%
  • Christine Drazan

    Votes: 1 3.4%
  • Other

    Votes: 1 3.4%
  • None of the Above

    Votes: 4 13.8%
  • I don't live in Oregon

    Votes: 2 6.9%

  • Total voters
    29
Lol
I looked at the above poll
Looks like shut out

Ah, I see, the poll attached to this thread!
Indeed, Betsy has a commanding lead...

barfo
 
It is just a poll but i'm not surprised. People are not happy with Kate Brown and consider Tina a similar platform. Drazan is running on those pain points and the homeless right now instead of the same ol' PERS is bad. I'm gonna destroy that campaign they have run on the last 10 years.
 
I just hope we get someone who loves communism is soft on crime, encourages homelessness and understsnds the virtues of not working and leeching off the state.

We also should shut down our farms because they cause the climate to change. Also we need to force inject everyone with the death shots every 3 months to lower out xarbon footprint.
 
That changed quickly
 
Betsy seems too be a wolf in sheep's clothing, as does Drazen. Betsy has an A rating from the NRA, and Christine is anti-abortion. As much as I would prefer to not vote for Tina, both of those stands are deal killers for me. So Kotek it is.
 
Between Betsy and Tina?
I'd be okay with Betsy or Tina. Even having Drazen, she would have to work across the aisle to get anything done. There can be value in that. Either way, I think Tina wins.

It may be helpful if anyone has a link or can explain to us all to how it's going to be decided on election night. I tried finding the info on the secretary of state's website but gave up pretty quick. With a potential three way race it could get tricky, right? Or is it just straight up popular vote? Feel free to flog me for my ignorance.
 
Who would be the best mediator, conciliator and arbitrator. Thats what we need.
 
I'd be okay with Betsy or Tina. Even having Drazen, she would have to work across the aisle to get anything done. There can be value in that. Either way, I think Tina wins.

It may be helpful if anyone has a link or can explain to us all to how it's going to be decided on election night. I tried finding the info on the secretary of state's website but gave up pretty quick. With a potential three way race it could get tricky, right? Or is it just straight up popular vote? Feel free to flog me for my ignorance.

In Oregon it's straight plurality. Whoever gets the most votes wins, even if that's much less than 50% of the overall vote.

barfo
 
In Oregon it's straight plurality. Whoever gets the most votes wins, even if that's much less than 50% of the overall vote.

barfo
Thanks. Wasn't living in the state for the last one. This one does seem a bit more of a toss up than any in a while. Don't know how many gubernatorial's you are in pirate year, but thanks for holding off on the flogging.
 
How Much Money Can You Give to a Campaign for Oregon Governor?
How much do you have?


I want to give money to Tina Kotek in the governor’s race because Betsy Johnson is a gun-toting narcissist and Christine Drazan is a mean-spirited Trump lapdog. Under state campaign finance laws, how much money can I give to Kotek’s campaign directly?
—Very Concerned

Hey, America! Tired of being hassled by The Man for smoking weed, possessing 1.99 grams of hard drugs for personal consumption, or giving suspiciously large sums of unregulated money to your favorite political candidates? Come to oh-so-permissive Oregon, the Las Vegas of everything except gambling, and let it all hang out! (Also, we have gambling.)

How much money can you give to Tina Kotek, or any other candidate for statewide office in Oregon? How much have you got? Oregon is one of just five states—along with Alabama, Nebraska, Utah and Virginia—that places no limit on campaign contributions from any source. (Five others* allow unlimited contributions from individuals, but restrict those from corporations, unions, political action committees, etc.)

Even though you can only donate $2,900 per cycle to a presidential campaign, you could give $7 million if you wanted to to a no-name candidate for the Oregon Legislature. (You could give even more; I just picked $7M because it would buy a strip-o-gram for every voter in a state House district.)

How did solid-blue Oregon wind up to the right of Texas on campaign finance? Our state constitution’s exceptionally broad free speech clause (or at least one interpretation of it) was one factor. In 1997′s Vannatta v. Keisling, 13 years before Citizens United, the Oregon Supreme Court held that massive campaign contributions are a protected form of free expression, like naked pole dancing. It would be unconstitutional, the justices felt, for the state to place restrictions (or pasties) on them, even on really huge ones.

Recently, however, the court has reversed itself, ruling in 2020 that campaign finance limits passed in 2016 by voters in Multnomah County were not necessarily unconstitutional. This could well open the door to limits statewide, so we can finally get the dirty money out of Oregon politics and put it back into Oregon journalism where it belongs.


*For those keeping score at home: Indiana, Iowa, North Dakota, Pennsylvania and Texas.

https://www.wweek.com/news/dr-know/...n-you-give-to-a-campaign-for-oregon-governor/
 
Right now I think I’ll vote for Betsy. That could change though.
 
How Much Money Can You Give to a Campaign for Oregon Governor?
How much do you have?


I want to give money to Tina Kotek in the governor’s race because Betsy Johnson is a gun-toting narcissist and Christine Drazan is a mean-spirited Trump lapdog. Under state campaign finance laws, how much money can I give to Kotek’s campaign directly?
—Very Concerned

Hey, America! Tired of being hassled by The Man for smoking weed, possessing 1.99 grams of hard drugs for personal consumption, or giving suspiciously large sums of unregulated money to your favorite political candidates? Come to oh-so-permissive Oregon, the Las Vegas of everything except gambling, and let it all hang out! (Also, we have gambling.)

How much money can you give to Tina Kotek, or any other candidate for statewide office in Oregon? How much have you got? Oregon is one of just five states—along with Alabama, Nebraska, Utah and Virginia—that places no limit on campaign contributions from any source. (Five others* allow unlimited contributions from individuals, but restrict those from corporations, unions, political action committees, etc.)

Even though you can only donate $2,900 per cycle to a presidential campaign, you could give $7 million if you wanted to to a no-name candidate for the Oregon Legislature. (You could give even more; I just picked $7M because it would buy a strip-o-gram for every voter in a state House district.)

How did solid-blue Oregon wind up to the right of Texas on campaign finance? Our state constitution’s exceptionally broad free speech clause (or at least one interpretation of it) was one factor. In 1997′s Vannatta v. Keisling, 13 years before Citizens United, the Oregon Supreme Court held that massive campaign contributions are a protected form of free expression, like naked pole dancing. It would be unconstitutional, the justices felt, for the state to place restrictions (or pasties) on them, even on really huge ones.

Recently, however, the court has reversed itself, ruling in 2020 that campaign finance limits passed in 2016 by voters in Multnomah County were not necessarily unconstitutional. This could well open the door to limits statewide, so we can finally get the dirty money out of Oregon politics and put it back into Oregon journalism where it belongs.


*For those keeping score at home: Indiana, Iowa, North Dakota, Pennsylvania and Texas.

https://www.wweek.com/news/dr-know/...n-you-give-to-a-campaign-for-oregon-governor/

Hey there is gambling here.

Lol I missed the next sentence.
 

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