How to Prevent Abuses in Primary Elections
In the early stages of the 2000 Republican presidential primary,
Arizona Senator John McCain appeared to have a strong chance against
Texas governor George W. Bush. Much of his support, however, was coming
from independents and Democrats in states with "open" or "blanket"
primaries. Republicans were therefore rightly concerned about having
their party co-opted. They filed a lawsuit to prevent non-Republicans
from voting in the Republican primary. The Democrats and other parties
did likewise.
In an open primary, voters arriving at their precinct can choose a
ballot for any party, regardless of their official party affiliation.
Blanket primaries go even further, allowing any voter to vote for any
candidate of any party for any office. California had a blanket primary
in 2000 (although in the presidential race the votes only counted when
the voter voted for a candidate from his or her own party). In a blanket
primary, each voter gets a ballot listing every candidate from every
party for every office.
The problem with open and blanket primaries is that they give voters
of one party the opportunity to sabotage or co-opt the primary election
of another party. Sabotage occurs when insincere outside voters try to
nominate a "fringe" candidate with little chance in the general
election. Co-opting, on the other hand, occurs when outside voters try
to nominate a candidate they actually prefer but who does not represent
the mainstream of the candidate's own party. Open primaries are bad
enough, but blanket primaries are even worse. Open primaries at least
require voters to vote for candidates of the same party for all the
offices on a ballot, but blanket primaries allow voters to choose any
candidate from any party for any office.
How many voters would be willing to withdraw from their own party
primary to vote in another party's primary? Usually not many--if the
voter's own party primary is competitive. But what if it isn't? Reagan
ran uncontested for re-election in 1984, and Clinton ran uncontested in
1996, for example. Open and blanket primaries were not common then, but
what if they had been? Republicans would have been absolutely free to
sabotage or co-opt the Democratic primary in 1984, and Democrats would
have been free to do the same to the Republican primary in 1996. Such a
situation would be grossly unfair, hence open and blanket primaries
should be abolished.
Voters can switch their official party affiliation to vote in the
opposition primary, of course. There is no sincerity test for party
registration, nor should there be. But there is a simple way to prevent
attempts to sabotage or co-opt primary elections. Voters should not be
allowed to vote in a party primary unless they have been registered well
in advance of the election, say six months. Furthermore, voters should
not be allowed to switch parties if their current party has the
presidency and is in the first term. That would prevent voters from
taking advantage of an uncontested (or weakly contested) primary in
their own party.
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