Oregon elections, 2008
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On November 4, 2008, the U.S. state of Oregon held statewide general elections for three statewide offices (Oregon Secretary of State, secretary of state, Oregon State Treasurer, treasurer, and Oregon Attorney General, attorney general), Oregon legislative elections, 2008, both houses of the Oregon Legislative Assembly, and twelve state Initiatives and referendums in the United States, ballot measures. The primary elections were held on May 20, 2008. Both elections also included national races for President of the US, United States Senate election in Oregon, 2008, US Senator, and United States House of Representatives elections in Oregon, 2008, US House Representatives. Numerous local jurisdictions — cities, counties, and regional government entities — held elections for various local offices and ballot measures on these days as well.


Candidates for statewide offices

Democratic Party of Oregon, Democrat Kate Brown won the election for Secretary of State. She defeated Rick Metsger, Vicki Walker, and Paul Damian Wells in the Oregon Democratic primary, 2008, Democratic primary. She then won the general election, in which she faced Oregon Republican Party, Republican Rick Dancer (who was unopposed in the Oregon Republican primary, 2008, Republican primary) and Pacific Green Party nominee Seth Alan Woolley. Democrat Ben Westlund won the race for Treasurer. He and Republican Allen Alley were each unopposed in their respective primaries. Constitution Party of Oregon, Constitution Party nominee Michael Marsh was also on the November ballot. Democrat John Kroger was elected Attorney General. He won the Democratic nomination over Greg Macpherson. Kroger also won the Republican nomination since no Republican filed and the most write-in votes—2,885—were for him. Three minor party candidates were also on the November ballot: J Ashlee Albies (Oregon Working Families Party), Walter F. Brown (Pacific Green Party), and James E. Leuenberger (Constitution Party of Oregon). Brad Avakian, who was appointed Oregon Commissioner of Labor and Industries in spring 2008, defeated two opponents in his campaign to retain that seat: Pavel Goberman and Mark Welyczko. The position is non-partisan. Oregon Supreme Court Associate Justice Martha Walters won reelection, with no opponent. Oregon Court of Appeals judge Timothy Sercombe did as well.


State legislature

The Democratic Party of Oregon gained five seats in the Oregon House of Representatives, while the Oregon Republican Party gained one seat in the Oregon State Senate, state Senate, the one Democrat Ben Westlund vacated to run for Oregon State Treasurer, state treasurer. Going into the Seventy-fifth Oregon Legislative Assembly, 2009 legislative session, Democrats will have a 36-member majority in the 60-seat House, and an 18-member majority in the 30-seat Senate. These three-fifths majorities give Democrats exactly the number of votes in each house needed to pass any bills that raise revenue, due to the supermajority requirement in s:Oregon Constitution/Article IV#Section 25, Article IV §25 of Oregon Constitution, Oregon's constitution. Of the 60 races for the House, 39 had both Democratic and Republican candidates; 24 of those were in districts previously represented by Republicans, 15 in districts previously represented by Democrats. Sixteen Democrats had no Republican opponent, and five Republicans had no Democratic opponent. Sixteen of the Senate's 30 seats were up for election. Fifteen are typically slated for general election, but Brad Avakian's seat was opened up when he was appointed Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries, state labor commissioner. Nine of the districts were previously held by Democrats, of which four races were contested; seven were currently held by Republicans, of which four were contested.


Ballot measures

Oregonian voters decided on 15 statewide ballot measures in 2008, Measures 51 through 65.


May

In the May primary election, all three statewide ballot measures, 51, 52, and 53, passed. Measures 51 and 52 amended the Oregon Constitution with regard to crime Victims' Rights Amendment, victims' rights; Measure 53 also amended the state Constitution to modify the limits on property forfeited in criminal cases. All three were legislative referrals. Measures 51 and 52 passed by wide margins, but Measure 53 was extremely close and required a hand recount; it eventually passed with a final official count of 50.03% to 49.97%.


Measure 51

''Amends constitution: Enables crime victims to enforce existing constitutional rights in prosecutions, delinquency proceedings; authorizes implementing legislation.''


Measure 52

''Amends constitution: Enables crime victims to enforce existing constitutional rights in prosecutions, delinquency proceedings; authorizes implementing legislation.''


Measure 53

''Amends constitution: Modifies provisions governing civil forfeitures related to crimes; permits use of proceeds by law enforcement.''


November

In November 2008, voters considered eight initiatives, 58 through 65, and four legislative referrals, 54 through 57. Measures 54, 55, 56, and 62 were amendments to the Oregon Constitution. The four referrals all passed, and the initiatives all failed. Detailed information on these measures and official results are available from the Oregon Secretary of State Oregon State Elections Division, Elections Division.


Measure 54

''Amends constitution: Standardized voting eligibility for school board elections with other state and local elections.'' Repealed the unenforceable state constitutional provision that only people 21 years of age or older can vote in school board elections.


Measure 55

''Amends constitution: Changes operative date of redistricting plans; allows affected legislators to finish term in original district.''


Measure 56

''Amends constitution: Provides that May and November property tax elections are decided by majority of voters voting.'' Repealed the double majority, "double majority" rule for these elections enacted by Oregon Ballot Measures 47 (1996) and 50 (1997), Measure 47 in 1996.


Measure 57

''Increases sentences for drug trafficking, theft against elderly and specified repeat property and identity theft crimes; requires addiction treatment for certain offenders.''


Measure 58

''Prohibits teaching public school student in language other than English for more than two years.''


Measure 59

''Creates an unlimited deduction for federal income taxes on individual taxpayers' Oregon income-tax returns.''


Measure 60

''Teacher "classroom performance," not seniority, determines pay raises; "most qualified" teachers retained, regardless of seniority.''


Measure 61

''Creates mandatory minimum prison sentences for certain theft, identity theft, forgery, drug, and burglary crimes.''


Measure 62

''Amends constitution: Allocates 15% of Oregon Lottery, lottery proceeds to public safety fund for crime prevention, investigation, prosecution.''


Measure 63

''Exempts specified property owners from building permit requirements for improvements valued at/under 35,000 dollars.''


Measure 64

''Penalizes person, entity for using funds collected with "public resource" (defined) for "political purpose" (defined).''


Measure 65

''Changes general election nomination processes for major/minor party, independent candidates for most partisan offices.'' Would have created a blanket primary.


Citizens' Initiative Review of 58

Healthy Democracy organized a trial run of the Citizens' assembly, Citizens' Initiative Review process they advocated in September on Oregon Ballot Measure 58 (2008), Ballot measure 58. They brought together a representative cross-section of voters as a citizens' jury to question and hear from advocates, and experts on language education. The panelists then deliberated and reflected together to come up with statements in support (9 panelists) and opposed to (14 panelists) the measure, which are available online and were read out by the panelists at a press conference. Health Democracy advocated for the state to organize such a review of each ballot measure, and include the statements in the voters' pamphlet. '"It was exhausting, but it was exciting to have a group of people with hugely diverse backgrounds and experience listening carefully to both sides and all respectful to one another," said Lorene Wallick'"Reforming the Initiative Process"
''Think Out Loud'', November 13, 2008


See also

* Seventy-fourth Oregon Legislative Assembly


References


External links


Video debate of Oregon ballot measures
from the Brown Club of Oregon {{2008 United States elections 2008 Oregon elections, 2008 elections in the United States by state, Oregon Oregon elections by year