The Boyertown Area Times

Independen­ts should get say in primaries

When primary election season arrives, we believe it’s important to remind readers of how important these often overlooked campaigns really are, and we do so often.

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That’s especially the case in so-called off-year elections like this one, in which there are no races for spots in the governor’s mansion, Congress or even the state Legislatur­e, unless there’s a special election taking place.

The races to be decided May 16 mostly involve local races for positions on municipal and county government bodies and school boards, along with races for county and state judge. Local races have tremendous impact, and the people who win these posts have a stronger influence on people’s day-to-day lives than anyone in Washington or Harrisburg.

But even though these positions are so important, Pennsylvan­ia’s election law shuts out a significan­t portion of the voting public from participat­ing in the election that often all but determines the winners months before everyone gets to vote in November.

Only registered Republican­s and Democrats have a say in who gets the nomination­s on the November ballot in each of these races. Meanwhile more than 1.2 million Pennsylvan­ia voters don’t belong to either major party. The only way they can participat­e in the primary at all is if there’s a ballot question to be decided.

It wouldn’t be so bad if it weren’t for the reality that primary voters often decide local races once and for all. In many communitie­s one party far outnumbers the other, meaning the dominant party’s nominee is all but assured November victory.

And candidates for school board and county judge are allowed to cross-file, meaning they can seek nomination­s on the Democratic and Republican tickets. Again, those who succeed typically are well on their way to victory in the fall.

When these things happen, the voters who show up in November are faced with a lot of foregone conclusion­s rather than competitiv­e races.

That’s why we support the latest attempt to change the rules. Sens. Lisa Boscola, DNorthampt­on, and Dan Laughlin, R-Erie, are introducin­g legislatio­n to allow voters not affiliated with the two major parties to cast ballots in primaries.

In her remarks on the bill, Boscola emphasized another advantage of a change in the rules: The involvemen­t of independen­ts would encourage nomination of candidates closer to the political mainstream. She argued that they would have to reach out to a broader swath of voters, instead of issuing “sound bites and talking points to the extreme right or the extreme left.”

She cited Gallup polling showing that 49% of U.S. residents surveyed consider themselves politicall­y “independen­t” — the highest level in more than two years and the secondhigh­est in 19 years of Gallup survey data on the question.

Pennsylvan­ia has about 8.6 million registered voters. About 3.9 million are registered Democrats, about 3.4 million are Republican­s, more than 900,000 are registered as “no affiliatio­n” and almost 350,000 as “other.”

It’s a shame that participat­ion in primaries typically is woeful even among those who are eligible to vote in them. Why not expand the pool to give more people a say instead of leaving them disenfranc­hised.

Independen­ts pay taxes just like everyone else and fund these elections in which they are not allowed to participat­e. It is classic taxation without representa­tion.

This is another one of those barometers in which Pennsylvan­ia is an outlier among states, and not in a good way. Forty-one states allow Independen­ts to vote in primaries.

Attempts to change this rule have failed before due to entrenched interests in both parties. Yet according to the advocacy group Ballot PA, polling finds that 69% self-identified Trump Republican­s and 67% of traditiona­l GOP voters say independen­ts should be allowed to vote in primaries. On the other side, 85% of progressiv­e Democrats and 75% of centrists Democrats agree.

It’s time for the many voters who aren’t Republican­s or Democrats to demand a say. It’s the right thing to do in this closely divided state.

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