Albuquerque Journal

Time to break the two-party system

New group aims to back independen­t candidates

- BY BOB PERLS CO-CHAIR, UNITE NEW MEXICO Bob Perls is a former New Mexico state representa­tive and former U.S. diplomat.

So many myths about the two-party system and so little time to debunk them. But let’s try because every election we keep doing the same thing and we get the same outcome — members from two warring factions who can’t solve New Mexico’s problems.

Myth No. 1: People are apathetic, and that is why they don’t vote. WRONG. People are rational creatures and rightly have surmised that their vote does not matter lately because the elections are rigged. How? Most politician­s are elected with little to no competitio­n. New Mexico has the greatest number of “free riders” of any state — incumbents with no general election opposition. This year, for example, 34 districts will be unconteste­d by one of the two major parties. If a voter has no choice, why should they bother to vote?

Myth No. 2: If we could only elect more of us and less of them, everything would be great. WRONG. We live in a diverse state and a diverse country. This idea that the other side is wrong, evil, pigheaded, stupid or whatever is what has gotten us into this mess. When you talk to the “others” you will find you agree on 80 percent of the important issues. We need an election system that allows politician­s to find that common ground, that forces them to talk with all voters of every stripe and rewards voters for showing up by giving them a system full of elected officials that work together and problem solve. Open primaries, ranked-choice voting, nonpartisa­n redistrict­ing commission­s, free and fair ballot access for independen­t candidates and other political reforms must be passed in New Mexico so we stop fighting with each other and start working together. We should be in last place no more.

Myth No. 3: We can’t change the system. WRONG. We control the system, but if we behave in a crazy way by voting for the same people and the same parties over and over again, then truly nothing will change. We change the system by supporting credible, thoughtful candidates who are committed to the people and not the political parties. Twentyfive percent of New Mexicans do not belong to a major political party. Forty-five percent of Americans don’t. Sixty percent of millennial­s are registerin­g as independen­ts. In short, we have the troops and need to start a non-violent revolution!

Myth No. 4: We can’t elect a non-partisan, independen­t candidate to office in New Mexico. WRONG. We just launched Unite New Mexico, and we already have two independen­t candidates for the state House that stand a great chance of winning this November. Other independen­t or “declined-tostate” voters have until the end of June to file for offices up and down the ballot for the election this November. Competitio­n is the cornerston­e of our economy because it ensures choice. So, why do we put up with no or little choice at the ballot box? If independen­t candidates run against every incumbent who had a free ride in the general election this November and in 2020, it would change the face of politics in New Mexico, but most importantl­y, it would increase voter turnout because people show up when there are choices.

Unite New Mexico aims to represent non-partisan, nonaligned, independen­t voters and candidates in New Mexico. Our candidates, if elected, will advocate for all people in the state Legislatur­e. Unite New Mexico exists to level the playing field for independen­ts who want to run for office. And, together, we will set an example of civil discourse in politics because the enemy is not the other party or those with no party. The enemy is apathy and frustratio­n that leads to the insanity of doing the same thing, the same way and continuall­y hoping the outcome is different. We are offering a different way. See our website for details.

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