Albuquerque Journal

Don’t give major parties more power

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STRAIGHT TICKET voting is a throwback to an era when many people really could not get enough informatio­n about candidates to make a sound decision, so they relied on a label to decide who to vote for.

Informatio­n is easier to come by now and if people want to learn about a candidate, all they have to do is take 10 seconds to do a name search and they can find out.

Let’s be clear: straight ticket voting is not about helping the elderly or handicappe­d, it is about helping the major parties and mostly in NM the Democratic Party. As a New Mexican who is actively involved with election and campaign reform focused on increasing voter engagement, I am opposed to straight ticket voting.

No state has re-implemente­d straight ticket voting for over a decade. Six states have eliminated this practice in the last decade. This choice is going backwards, and I am deeply disappoint­ed our secretary of state is pushing this regression.

She is on the right side of many issues such as opening up primaries, rank choice voting and more, but seems blind on this issue.

In New Mexico, the two major parties control who can vote in primaries, a taxpayer funded election. They control when you have to register to vote. They control ballot access making it as much as 10 times harder for independen­t candidates to get on the ballot to give voters choice. They control much of the money that funds elections. They control how legislatur­es caucus. And by and large they have created this perpetual state of two warring factions that have grid-locked politics in America. Their power comes from these special laws that need to be dismantled, not bolstered.

The two major political parties have some great volunteers and I honor them. But, they are private organizati­ons and have no business setting the rules of how campaigns and elections should be waged.

Straight ticket voting is yet another attempt for a major party to try to give itself an unfair advantage when people want and need more choices on the ballot, not fewer. Let voters take an extra 30 seconds and make sure there is not an independen­t, Green, Libertaria­n or even a member of the other major party they might want to vote for rather than making it so easy to mindlessly push one button for 20 candidates. That is not voting, that is giving your vote away.

Bob Perls Corrales

Editor’s note: Bob Perls, a registered independen­t, is a former state representa­tive and founder of New Mexico Open Primaries.

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