In recent weeks, a conversation has been renewed about whether the Deschutes County Board of Commissioners races should be partisan. Deschutes County Commissioner Phil Chang, a Democrat who joined the board in 2021, believes they shouldn’t beโand we agree with him.
Chang’s assertion that county commissioners should drop their party affiliation is not without precedent. In Oregon, the majority of counties have non-partisan boards of commissioners. Deschutes County is among only nine of 36 Oregon counties to maintain a partisan board. In a county that is divided fairly evenly among Democrats, Republicans and non-affiliated votersโrepresenting roughly one-third of eachโturning away from the frequent vitriol of party politics is the right thing.
While they do adopt policies as part of their job, a county commissioners’ work is largely about administering the practical and often mundane business of running a local government.
According to information offered by the Oregon Secretary of State, county commissions are “responsible for county administration, management, and policy. The board prepares and adopts county and service district budgets and provides administrative services, support, and liaison to service districts, cities, public agencies, organizations, the Oregon Legislative Assembly, and federal and state officials. It is responsible for conducting public meetings, hearings, road vacations, private and public land sales and exchanges as well as enacting ordinances, orders, contracts, leases and other legal agreements.”
The job of a Deschutes County Commissionerโat least during election season, has become more about introducing toxic party politicking and social issues into a job that should be about execution. We don’t need to see more partisan county commissioners continue to tilt at windmills and challenge the state about whether our cities need to build out or up. In recent years, the battles between our county and the state Land Use Board of Appeals have cost county taxpayers endless staff time.
And let’s not get into the weeds about how toxic the primaries can be. In one recent county commissioner primary, we saw a solid, experienced, competent and moderate Republican lose to a candidate who was vocal about turning the party and the community hard-right on social issues โmaking finding consensus across the aisle a much wider chasm to cross.
Some argue that voters are not smart enough to think for themselves when approaching a candidate who does not have “Republican” or “Democrat” next to their name. This is nonsense. If ever we hope to get beyond the toxic party politics that dominate this era, then voters need to do their part, do their research and be informed enough to see beyond a binary labeling system. Voters are smart enoughโbut this system of branding and the ease of simply ticking a “D” or “R” box is enabling a dysfunctional system. Erasing the party affiliation in county elections would force voters to think for themselves about the issues, and avoid the boilerplate party platformโand isn’t that what we needโan informed electorate that actually thinks about the issues and the candidates before they vote?
As Thomas Jefferson put it, “a well-informed electorate is a prerequisite to democracy.” At least in this local election, doing away with party affiliation will force us all to be better.
The Deschutes County Board of Commissioners has the power to put this issue on the next ballot. It receives comments from the public at citizeninput@deschutes.org (for items not currently on the board’s agenda) or board@deschutes.org (for items currently on its agenda). This issue is not listed among agenda items in currently published agendas, as of press time.
This article appears in Jan 27 โ Feb 3, 2021.









A nonpartisan County Commission would provide more democracy to Deschutes County voters because it would allow nonaffiliated voters to participate in the primary. Patti Adair doesn’t like it because she wants assurance that a Republican (ie her) will be on the general election ballot. She prefers to restrict democracy to help her political party (and herself). That is hardly a shock, of course. Bend’s nonpartisan City Council elections work well for all Bend voters and I seriously doubt that voters could not discern the political differences between Melanie Kebler and Justin Livingstone or Megan Perkins and Chris Piper. County demographics are changing and we will soon have two or three liberal/progressive Commissioners no matter how much Patti whines. Once she is bounced from office maybe she can find a job with equivalent salary working to elect the next QAnon candidate that emerges from the self-destructive Oregon GOP. LOL
I heard a report that 11,000 voters have left the Oregon Republican Party in recent weeks. Even Knute Buehler! The Oregon GOP is a cult of wacko conspiracy theorists who are starting to make Marjorie Taylor Greene look rational. Jo Rae Perkins for Governor!
Mickey: It’s also reported that 8,600 Democrats left the Oregon Democratic Party in the same time frame.