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Commentary: Letters to the Editor: March 7, 2005

Journal Record, The (Oklahoma City),  Mar 7, 2005  by Journal Record Staff

Dear Editor,

Our state constitution guarantees fair elections. Denying the citizens the opportunity to vote for the candidate they choose is not fair. We have the chance to have fair elections in Oklahoma due to the introduction of HB 1429. The bill, introduced by Marion Cooksey will change the restrictions on how political parties are recognized. It takes as much as $100,000 to get on the ballot in Oklahoma for parties other than the Democrats and Republicans.

HB 1429 is in the Rules Committee at the state House of Representatives. The chair of the committee has told Cooksey that the bill will not get a hearing, which means it will not get debated on the House floor since it will not get out of committee.

I want to know why our representatives put such harsh restriction on political freedom. Oklahomans that wanted to vote for a Libertarian or a Green could not in 2004. Some refused to vote for president in 2004. I left the partisan areas of my ballot blank. There were almost 10,000 under votes in 2004 due to lack of third party options, which was a result of Oklahoma having the harshest ballot access restrictions in the nation. We need fair elections just like the state constitution guarantees.

- Jimmy Cook, vice-chairman of the Oklahoma Libertarian Party, Claremore

Dear Editor,

I read your story about the RedHawks today in The Journal Record through the KFOR Web site. It would be nice if the local television stations spent more time talking about the RedHawks. With so many people out of town staying here overnight, they might go to a game if they knew about the team. It is too bad that all three channels think that OU sports is the only thing happening in Oklahoma. I'd like to see them put a player on, tell us when the team will be back in town, how far in first place they are, etc. Seeing that the city spent $3 million building the stadium, some publicity would not hurt. Also there was a typo in the story - it said that the park opened in 1999. It so happens that I took my wife and our families to the ballgame the evening we got married, June 12, 1998. Can't tell me I don't know how to treat my wife!

- John Pearl, Midwest City

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