The Capital

‘They’re both terrible’

Anne Arundel’s unaffiliat­ed voters who struggle to identify with Trump and Biden are facing a tough choice in November’s presidenti­al election

- By Brooks DuBose and Olivia Sanchez

WhenMatt Caminiti turned 18, he registered to vote as a Democrat because most people “fall into a political party based on the people around them,” he said.

His parentswer­e Democrats, so he was a Democrat. In his early 30s, Caminiti, a Gambrills resident, said he switched his registrati­on to “unaffiliat­ed” because hewas frustrated with theway he thought the two-party system generally garners “blind allegiance” from voters, and doesn’t require critical analysis of complicate­d issues.

Bethany Stanley became a Republican at age 18 thanks to conservati­ve parents. She switched to “unaffiliat­ed” when she moved out at 19. Nowa 31-year-old mother of three from Gambrills, Stanley still doesn’t see herself fitting into either of the two parties.

“I have a lot of views that are extremely conservati­ve and I have a lot of views that are extremely liberal,” she said. “So when I go back home to the Midwest, I’m seen as being like over the top liberal and then I feel like people out here think I’m over the top conservati­ve, so I just don’t fit in anywhere.”

Caminiti, Stanley, and about 90,000 Anne Arundel County “unaffiliat­ed” voters comprise about 22% of the county electorate with Democrats making up 43%, and Republican­s 33%.

Their numbers have swelled since 2016 as unaffiliat­ed voter registrati­on increased by 10,000, a 13% jump over the last four years.

In a series of interviews with The Capital before the death of Supreme Court Justice Ruther Bader Ginsberg Friday, some of those unaffiliat­ed voters talked about the election this fall.

The Democratic party pickedupne­arly15,000new voters, a 9.4% increase, since 2016. Republican registrati­on dropped by about 0.5% over the same period.

In November, unaffiliat­ed voters must decide whether to cast a vote for one of the two major-party candidates for president — President Donald Trump or his Democratic challenger Vice President Joe Biden — or vote third party. They, of course, could opt to not vote at all. Nearly 40% of such voters stayed home in the 2016 general election, according to county voter turnout data.

While Anne Arundel County has a large portion of “unaffiliat­ed” voters or self-identified independen­ts, they shouldn’t be viewed as a monolith, said Mileah Kromer, director of the Sarah T. Hughes Field Politics Center at Goucher College.

There is a misconcept­ion that all independen­t voters are “above the political fray,” she said, weighing each candidate and their platform before voting for whomever most closely aligns with their values. Whenthe reality is there are few true independen­ts, Kromer said.

“They identify as independen­ts, but in election years, they’ll usually vote for either the Democrat or Republican candidate consistent­ly in every single election.”

Polling shows that “unaffiliat­ed” voters are split into three roughly equal groups of Democratic-leaning, Republican-leaning and truly independen­t, said Dan Nataf, director of the Center for the Study of Local Issues atAnneArun­delCommuni­ty College.

Statewide, voters who don’t identify with either of the major parties tend to be younger and more white than Maryland’s electorate, Kromersaid. Theyalso tend to be less politicall­y engaged, Nataf said.

While it can be challengin­g to identify specific issues that drive independen­t voters, polling shows that tax relief and moderate economic policy polls well across all ideologies, Kromer said.

Historical­ly, the county has voted for the Republican presidenti­al candidate. But in 2016, Hillary Clinton won the county overTrump by a 6,000-vote margin becoming the first Democrat to do so since Lyndon Johnson in 1964. About 20,000 people voted for a thirdparty candidate.

Trump has been “consistent­ly underwater” with self-identified independen­t voters, who are much more critical of the president than Republican­s, Kromer said. Apoll Kromer conducted in February found that Trump had a 59% disapprova­l rating among independen­ts in Maryland compared to 19% disapprova­l among Republican­s.

About 30% of Maryland independen­ts do tend to approve of the president’s job — compared to 8% among Democrats — far before the 76% approval he garnered with Republican­s, the poll showed.

Caminiti said tax policy and social justice are among his top concerns when selecting a candidate. Policy aside, he considers the demeanor of a candidate, and their ability to approach sensitive and complex topics with nuance. In November, he plans to vote for Biden.

“Itwas very clear tome— and it has become even clearer since he’s been in office— that DonaldTrum­p is one of those people that lives in sound bites,” Caminiti said. “Whether Biden can do it or not, I don’t know, but I have more confidence that he can do it than Trump.”

Stanley and her husband Patrick, a 35-year-old engineer, both said their priority is pro-life issues, and not just abortion but also gun violence, the treatment of migrants at theU.S.-Mexico border and the death penalty.

“I am very pro-life in all of its meanings and states,” Patrick Stanley said. “If they’re very much pushing for abortion, that’s a negative. The same thing for capital punishment [and] for lots of different stances that could fall under that category.”

Trump, a life-longDemocr­at, had expressed proabortio­n rights views for decades before running for president as a Republican on a pro-life platform. Biden has softened his views on abortion, promising last year to protect abortion laws and funding for Planned Parenthood if he becomes president.

Maryland, like many other states, holds closed primaries in which only voters registered to one of the two major parties can vote, effectivel­y relegating unaffiliat­ed voters to the sideline until the general election.

On top of the state’s heavily-Democratic bent, the state’s closed primary system is another that leaves independen­ts feeling disenfranc­hised, Kromer said.

Patrick Stanley is currently registered as aDemocrat so he could vote in Maryland’s June primary. Registerin­g as an independen­t in a closed primary state like Maryland only limits his ability to vote, he said.

“Frommy understand­ing of Maryland election laws, being a registered independen­t only limits myself more,” he said. “So there’s no point in time where registerin­g as independen­t is tomy advantage.”

In 2016, Stanley and his wife, who were living in Virginia — another closed primary state— temporaril­y registered Republican and Democrat, respective­ly. He voted for a Republican candidate other than Trump and Bethany voted for Bernie Sanders.

While her husband is leaning toward a thirdparty candidate, Bethany Stanley said she has yet to decide who she is voting for in November but that she “probably won’t” vote to re-elect Trump.

Neitherwer­e able to vote in the 2016 presidenti­al election because of a family emergency on election day, they said, and plan to vote by mail to ensure their vote is counted.

Stanley had initially been high on Biden, but his choice of running mate, U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., turned her off, she said. She had hoped he would pick Tammy Duckworth, a Democratic senator from Illinois and Iraq war veteran who lost both her legs in combat.

Hewould have to “have a personalit­y change” for her to consider voting for him, Stanley said of Trump.

“Maybe apologize for some of his past transgress­ions, and take responsibi­lity for his bad behavior in the past,” she said. “Because to me, he is not a conservati­ve candidate. He has been very naughty in the past. I just can’t vote for someone thinking they are conservati­ve when they don’t live their life like a conservati­ve.”

Chris Biondi, 46, of Sandy Point, who works for a regional plumbing union, said he is generally liberal, but he is a gun owner, and he differs from the Democratic party on other key issues.

Biondi said he’s heard fromfellow­unaffiliat­ed voters that they will vote third party or they won’t vote at all. Though he said he understand­s the “when are we going to stop voting for the least bad candidate” mentality some voters have, 2020 is not the year to try it out, he said.

“In an election like this, I think that is borderline negligent,” Biondi said.

His priorities are education, universal healthcare and voter protection. He plans to vote for Biden.

Barbara Ambrose, a 32year-old Annapolis grocery store worker, said she is favor of “smart” tax and spending policy and “revamping” social programs. Ambrose is voting for Jo Jorgenson, the Libertaria­n presidenti­al candidate, she said. She voted for Libertaria­n Gary Johnson in 2016.

“They’re both terrible,” Ambrose said ofTrump and Biden. “They’re all crooks. It’s honestly as simple as that I don’t trust anybody or any side.”

 ?? PAULW. GILLESPIE/CAPITAL GAZETTE ?? Matt Caminiti, 18, is an unaffiliat­ed voter from Gambrills.
PAULW. GILLESPIE/CAPITAL GAZETTE Matt Caminiti, 18, is an unaffiliat­ed voter from Gambrills.

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