Albuquerque Journal

Are unaffiliat­ed voters a way back to better government?

Although they don’t get real considerat­ion from party bosses

- BY ROCK TOPE ALBUQUERQU­E RESIDENT

The legislativ­e bill that would have given a primary ballot to decline-to-state (DTS) voters was tabled early in the 2022 regular session. House Speaker Brian Egolf explained that voters already have that right by using sameday registrati­on. So, I am curious as to why parties will accept votes from same-day registrant­s, but not from DTS voters? And why they don’t tap into the 23% of tax-paying unaffiliat­ed voters in New Mexico who help pay for the primaries they cannot vote in? The answer may explain why election reform is so difficult.

I disenfranc­hised myself from primary elections when I changed my affiliatio­n to decline-tostate. In general elections, I have often voted for executive candidates from one party and legislativ­e candidates from the other party. I could not do that at the primary level, so I went DTS as kind of a protest; my mother recited that adage about cutting off your nose. As politics devolved into party power-mongering, I was happy to maintain my unaffiliat­ed status. Today, if you say what you are, you will get snarled at by half the room, whichever party you claim.

The 24% of voters who are DTS would be a great base for a major party, but how do you build a party from people who declined to join a party? Yet, they should be able to vote in primaries and we should give them a ballot with candidates of every party. A nonpartisa­n primary ballot for nonpartisa­n voters. I get giddy at the prospect. Some candidates would surely moderate their platforms to appeal to the new source of voters; conservati­ves who find Trumpism appalling and liberals who find “defund the police” a chant too far. Some of these more moderate candidates would make it to the general election.

If you don’t listen to the political parties, you will know America is really a middle-of-theroad landscape. But both parties tolerate extreme views at the same time they denigrate their own members who have even a tinge of moderation, independen­ce or bipartisan­ship. One party censured members who took principled positions and pledges allegiance to an ex-president who meddles in elections for personal revenge. Good excuses to drop your party affiliatio­n.

Bernie Sanders is a major leader in the Democratic Party and he’s not even a Democrat. So, what difference does a voter’s affiliatio­n make? Parties battle for power in government, but they should not be able to manipulate elections to obtain that power. They do it in several ways now. If more voters become unaffiliat­ed, primaries will be decided by fewer voters and that would be a serious risk for democracy. The unaffiliat­ed could lead us back to better government.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States