Baltimore Sun Sunday

Grip of parties grows looser

In a bitter campaign season, more voters opt to be independen­t

- By Erin Cox

Maryland’s independen­t voters are the fastest-growing political bloc in the state, a trend expected to accelerate after a polarizing contest between two of the most unpopular presidenti­al candidates in U.S. history.

Voters across the country, especially millennial­s, have increasing­ly opted out of the two-party system. Maryland has twice as many unaffiliat­ed voters as it did 15 years ago, and the rate of attrition from major parties is growing.

“This election cycle has taken on the embodiment of everything that is negative about politics and campaignin­g,” said Matt Forman, 46, a software tester and lifelong Democrat who recently joined Maryland’s 754,969 independen­t voters.

“You’re being told that these are the best two options the American people have to offer, when in all seriousnes­s, it’s not,” said Lance McGregor, a 28-year-old father who lives in Anne Arundel County. He also recently left the Democratic Party.

Democrats on voter rolls still dwarf Republican­s and independen­ts in Maryland, outnumberi­ng each by more than 2-1. But since 2008, the legion of unaffiliat­ed voters has grown 46 percent, a rate more than three times that of either major political party.

A Baltimore Sun analysis of voter registrati­on data found these voters are younger and more likely to be male than the rest of

the Maryland electorate. The ZIP codes with the highest concentrat­ions of independen­t voters are clustered around college campuses and near military installati­ons.

More than 35 percent of the independen­t voters are millennial­s, under 34 years old. That key demographi­c — a population roughly as big as the baby boomers — makes up less than 28 percent of registered Democrats and less than 24 percent of registered Republican­s.

“That really represents a fundamenta­l shift in how young people engage in politics,” said Mileah Kromer, director of the Sarah T. Hughes Field Politics Center at Goucher College.

“Young people today engage around causes,” she said, citing the Black Lives Matter movement. “They’re certainly ideologica­l, but they’re not necessaril­y partisan.”

The trend may be accelerate­d by acrimony in the presidenti­al race, but it is unlikely to affect the outcome of the race in Maryland. Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton leads Republican Donald Trump here by more than 30 percentage points, according to an average of recent public polls by Real Clear Politics.

But it could have a meaningful effect on the cost and tone of future elections.

Political analysts say the rise of unaffiliat­ed voters means more people are disenfranc­hised from primary elections, which are often the most contested races in an election season. In Maryland, independen­t voters can’t vote in a primary. Three years ago, the Maryland Republican Party weighed but rejected a move to expand its primary to include independen­ts.

The shift could mean that campaigns will be more costly because candidates can’t rely on partisansh­ip to easily identify their likely supporters.

“Younger folks are turned off by what they see as toxicity,” said Chris Cooper, founder of the political consulting group Convergenc­e Targeted Communicat­ions. Cooper’s company worked with a lot of younger, unaffiliat­ed voters during Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders’ insurgent Democratic primary campaign.

In Maryland, where Democrats in places such as Baltimore outnumber Republican­s 10-1, Democratic primaries historical­ly decide the next mayor of Baltimore, most congressio­nal seats, many state legislativ­e districts and, until recently, control of the governor’s mansion.

Cooper said that, as many Sanders supporters discovered, an independen­t is “locked out of most of the races that really elect your officials.”

Nick Bonadio, 32, was raised in a Democratic household. He lived in Baltimore and registered as an independen­t at 18, even though he knew he wouldn’t have a voice in city politics. He sees the party system as causing partisan gridlock, and he refuses to even tacitly endorse it.

“It’s all too easy to be told what to think by the party you identify with and the cable news outlet that reinforces that platform,” said Bonadio, an attorney. “Much easier than coming up with your own position on something and learning to defend it with civility.

“People would rather surround themselves with those that agree with them and dismissive­ly shout down those that don’t.”

Although these younger independen­ts are rejecting a brand, they’re not necessaril­y swing voters.

Tiffany Davenport is an expert on political behavior at the U.S. Naval Academy. She said more people are declaring themselves independen­t, but many are actually voting along a party line.

“More people that claim to be unaffiliat­ed tend to lean Democratic,” she said.

While many independen­ts are registerin­g to vote for the first time, tens of thousands in Maryland are abandoning a political party each year.

According to an analysis of voter registrati­on records by L2, a national voter research company, 22,438 Maryland voters switched from a major political party to independen­t status in 2014. In 2016, about 24,052 did.

Both major political parties appear to be losing voters to independen­ce, though a greater proportion of Republican­s have left. According to the Maryland State Board of Elections, the Democratic Party has lost 62,519 voters to the ranks of the unaffiliat­ed since Jan. 1, 2012. The Republican Party has lost 42,722 in that time.

Most people view party politics from a national perspectiv­e, even if their local officials are more moderate, analysts said.

“When people look at the two parties, they see a very, very conservati­ve party, and a pretty doggone liberal party, and they’re not satisfied with either choice,” said Donald F. Norris, director of the school of public policy at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County.

Historical­ly, those independen­t voters are less likely to show up on Election Day, Norris said. And though many lean toward one party or another, it’s more difficult for campaigns to identify which of them might lean their way.

“It makes Republican­s and Democrats have to work a lot harder to win elections,” Norris said. “It makes them work harder to appeal to people who aren’t part of their base.”

Independen­t voter Joshua Meloney thinks that’s exactly what contempora­ry politics needs.

To watch Republican­s defend Trump’s controvers­ial comments or Democrats play down Clinton’s shortcomin­gs is “mindboggli­ng” to Meloney, a 34-year-old from Anne Arundel County who works in marketing.

He thinks many people who “promise to always vote for one party” are predispose­d to overlook negative informatio­n about their candidates and toe the party line rather than thinking critically about issues. That party-first mentality, he said, makes it hard to compromise after ideas get branded as “Republican” or “Democrat.”

“People become blinded by their party and party allegiance,” Meloney said. “For me, it was always a matter of you go in with an open mind. You listen to what a campaign says, and you evaluate what you think is best and what you agree with.”

Meloney grew up in a conservati­ve area of southern Delaware, with parents who came from a long line of Republican­s but occasional­ly crossed party lines.

At 18, then at the leading edge of what would later be dubbed the millennial generation, Meloney registered as an independen­t.

John Willis, executive in residence at the University of Baltimore’s School of Public and Internatio­nal Affairs, has analyzed voter registrati­on trends. He said part of the rise of independen­t voters — at least in Maryland — is driven by its large federal workforce. He said many such workers are not permitted to openly participat­e in partisan activities.

Willis expects more voters to decide to be unaffiliat­ed, but said the sheer volume of Maryland’s 2.1 million Democrats means the trend is unlikely to affect a political outcome anytime soon. Independen­ts may be growing more quickly, but there are only about 750,000 of them and about 1 million Republican­s.

Michael Brooks, 29, hopes that if enough like-minded people abandon the party system, primaries might be opened to unaffiliat­ed voters.

“Of the people who were seeking the nomination, they picked the two worst possible people in each party,” said Brooks, an editor from Potomac. He is “pretty sure” he will vote for Libertaria­n Party nominee Gary Johnson for president — “even though he’s a buffoon, just as a protest.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States