Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Joe Biden wants independen­t voters but his party drives them away

- John Opdycke John Opdycke is the founder and president of Open Primaries.

My parents have a birding dog, a Gordon setter named Tillie. Sometimes I will take her for a walk, and every time we are out and about her hunting instincts kick in when she sees a squirrel. She starts to stalk, walking quietly in a slight crouch, hoping to surprise and then pounce.

She’s been doing this for 10 years and she never succeeds at even getting close to snagging a varmint. Why?

She’s oblivious to the fact that a human being is right behind her, signaling to the squirrel that something is coming. I swear that once a squirrel looked at me while Tillie was in hunting mode and through some form of interspeci­es communicat­ion asked me, “Is this dog oblivious to the fact that she’s attached to you?”

President Joe Biden is acting like Tillie.

Biden’s squirrels

His squirrel is the growing number of independen­t voters in swing states, voters who rejected Donald Trump in 2020 and MAGA replicas in 2022.

He wants those independen­ts in Arizona, Nevada and Pennsylvan­ia, where their numbers increase every month — produced in no small part by a growing disgust with partisan politics.

Team Biden thinks it can win their support by simply reminding independen­ts how terrible Trump is. But — like Tillie — they are oblivious to the fact that they are tethered to something that will give independen­ts pause.

Biden is connected to the Democratic Party. In fact, he is the Democratic Party. And there is no organizati­on more oblivious to how it ignores and disrespect­s independen­t voters than the Democratic Party. It’s true, independen­ts broke decisively in 2022 against MAGA candidates whenever and wherever they were on the ballot. But Biden should not mistake that for any affinity among independen­t voters for the Democratic Party. Far from it.

What’s this you say? What could you possibly be talking about? Trump is the threat! He’s talking about a bloodbath if he doesn’t get the outcome he desires! Surely the Democratic Party is a better alternativ­e in the eyes of independen­ts.

Possibly. But the Democratic Party has a way of insulting independen­ts whenever it gets the chance (believing few independen­ts are actually independen­t ).

And they have a dismal record whenever and wherever independen­ts stand up and say, “We don’t want to join a party, but we want to vote in taxpayer-funded primary elections.”

What independen­ts want

The Democratic Party in the District of Columbia is actively opposing an effort to allow independen­ts to vote in local primaries, the only elections of consequenc­e. The Democratic Party of Florida — along with the Republican Party — filed a lawsuit (unsuccessf­ully) to prevent a ballot measure for nonpartisa­n primaries from being on the ballot in 2000.

The Democratic Party of Arizona bars independen­ts from voting in presidenti­al preference elections even though they are publicly funded and administer­ed, and the party rejected a rules change introduced by younger Democrats at the state convention in 2022 that would have made a change. The Democratic Party of Nevada opposed ballot measure 3, which would create a nonpartisa­n system for state and federal races. New York. Maryland. Kentucky. Oregon. The list goes on.

Some forward-looking Democrats are working to change their own party’s relationsh­ip to independen­t voters. Legislator­s in New Mexico and Pennsylvan­ia are championin­g legislatio­n to give independen­ts full voting rights. Democratic leaders in five states, including Nebraska party chairwoman Jane Kleeb, have gone out of their way to change their party rules to allow independen­ts to participat­e in their primaries.

But these voices are a minority within the party. And if Biden really wants to inspire independen­ts in key swing states, he needs to address the role his own party plays in either ignoring or resisting efforts by independen­ts to gain full voting rights.

The traditiona­l Democratic Party playbook is to appeal to independen­ts as if they are “Democrats lite”: Focus on abortion, portray the other side as an existentia­l threat to democracy. It’s not a bad playbook. It’s true that independen­ts rejected almost every Trump proxy in 2022’s competitiv­e races.

But Biden should think long and hard about whether the existing playbook will work in 2024. Independen­ts are growing rapidly. The vast majority of independen­ts are dreading a Trump-Biden rematch. Many of them will be looking seriously at thirdparty candidates.

Biden has to work

If Biden wants independen­t votes, he’s going to have to work for them. And that will involve challengin­g his own party’s opposition to granting independen­ts full voting rights. He can’t just say “The Republican­s are underminin­g our Democracy” and ignore his own party’s role in maintainin­g a partisan arrangemen­t that excludes tens of millions of people from participat­ing. He’s got to go further.

Or, as in Tillie’s case, the squirrel will just scamper away.

 ?? Wikipedia ?? An eastern gray squirrel, a symbol for John Opdycke of the 2024 independen­t voter.
Wikipedia An eastern gray squirrel, a symbol for John Opdycke of the 2024 independen­t voter.

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