The Commercial Appeal

Gop-sought primary restrictio­ns become Wyo. law

Legislatio­n changes window to switch parties ahead of election

- Mead Gruver

CHEYENNE, Wyo. – Switching political parties to be able to choose the primary in which a voter wants to cast a ballot is an old Wyoming tradition, one that has faced growing scrutiny as the state’s Democrats increasing­ly struggle to field strong candidates and Republican primaries often all but decide who eventually wins office.

At least some Democrats in this Gop-dominated state haven’t been shy about changing party affiliatio­n just to vote in Republican primaries, including the blockbuste­r U.S. House race featuring Rep. Liz Cheney’s loss to Cheyenne attorney Harriet Hageman last summer.

Amid GOP grumbling about “crossover voting,” switching parties ahead of primaries in Wyoming will now get a lot more difficult. Republican Gov. Mark Gordon allowed a bill curtailing the practice to take effect Friday without his signature.

The bill has flaws that may confuse voters but they aren’t serious enough to warrant a veto, Gordon said in a letter to lawmakers.

But Republican­s’ overwhelmi­ng voter registrati­on advantage in Wyoming stands to make the law’s changes “more academic than real,” Gordon wrote.

“I urge voters to learn about these changes,” he wrote.

Wyoming voters had been able to register to vote and declare party affiliatio­n at the polls or up to two weeks before primary day. The new law prohibits changing party affiliatio­n for almost three months before primary day in August.

Crossover voting in Wyoming got fresh attention ahead of the 2022 primary as former President Donald Trump and allies sought to discourage the state’s dwindling number of Democrats from voting for Cheney as she courted their votes.

“It makes total sense that only Democrats vote in the Democrat primary and only Republican­s vote in the Republican primary,” Trump said in a statement endorsing a similar bill last year that failed.

Access to voting in primaries varies widely across the country, ranging from 20 states where any voter may choose candidates from any party to nine states where only voters registered with a party can vote for that party’s candidates. The rest fall in between with a variety of rules, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

In Wyoming, Trump’s concerns about the Cheney race turned out to be overblown. Cheney, who stoked Trump’s ire by voting to impeach him for the Jan. 6, 2021, violence at the U.S. Capitol and by leading the House investigat­ion into the insurrecti­on, lost by 37 points, enough that even all the Democrats in Wyoming couldn’t have helped her win.

Wyoming secretary of state figures suggest crossover voting occurred. Democratic registrati­on fell from about 46,000 in January 2022, to 36,000 on primary day, Aug. 16, bottoming out post-primary at 30,000 in September – a modern-day low.

Republican registrati­on, meanwhile, climbed from about 196,000 in January 2022, to 215,000 on primary day and 235,000 in September. Republican registrati­on previously peaked at 209,000 after the 2020 election.

Cheney’s losing margin of almost 64,000 votes, however, far exceeded Wyoming’s Democratic registrati­on at any given time in the past decade.

Fears among Wyoming Republican­s have neverthele­ss been growing that Democrats in disguise are watering down conservati­ve values among leading GOP candidates at all levels.

Crossover voting has “undermined the sanctity of Wyoming’s primary process,” Republican Secretary of State Chuck Gray said in a statement after the bill cleared the House.

A former state legislator, Gray ran for the state’s top election oversight job last year on the debunked claim that widespread voter fraud cost Trump the 2020 election. Gray won a three-way GOP primary with 44%.

The Wyoming Republican Party, which censured

Cheney for opposing Trump and voted to no longer recognize her as a Republican, has supported the change as a top priority.

“Political parties should be able to select their own candidates free of interferen­ce and manipulati­on by outside entities,” a state party resolution said last fall.

The bill had far from unanimous support, however, even in a Wyoming Legislatur­e more dominated by Republican­s than at any time since 1920.

 ?? JAE C. HONG/AP, FILE ?? A woman votes early at a polling place ahead of the GOP primary election in Jackson, Wyo. in August. Switching political parties to be able to choose which primary to vote in is an old Wyoming tradition, one facing growing criticism as the state’s Democrats struggle to field strong candidates and Republican primaries often all but decide who eventually wins office.
JAE C. HONG/AP, FILE A woman votes early at a polling place ahead of the GOP primary election in Jackson, Wyo. in August. Switching political parties to be able to choose which primary to vote in is an old Wyoming tradition, one facing growing criticism as the state’s Democrats struggle to field strong candidates and Republican primaries often all but decide who eventually wins office.

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