election day
Apr. 27th, 2004 10:47 amAs I approached the polling place this morning I wondered if they'd moved it without telling me -- there was that little signage. Yeah, it's a primary, but I still thought there'd be more campaigning, especially with one hot race for US Senate.
As I was voting I heard one of the workers say "that's the first Independent of the day". I'm not actually an Independent; I'm a registered Libertarian. To them it's the same thing: disable everything except the ballot initiative. The bundle of cards from which they pulled my registration seemed to represent about 10% of all cards, based on what I saw in the bin. (No, it didn't include Republicans.) Interesting. I wonder if the set of people registered in minor parties has a higher turn-out rate than the Republicans and Democrats. I suspect that people who register in minor parties are more likely to be politically active, but I don't know where to find the data on turn-out by party.
I considered temporarily changing my registration to Republican so I could influence that hot Senate race, but decided against. It feels wrong even though it's legal, and that race may already be messed up because the Democrats were encouraging their people to do that very thing and I suspect a bunch of them did. (The incumbent is mostly a Democrat in Republican's clothing; the challenger is a more traditional Republican. The Dems want to knock the challenger out early.) Besides, I couldn't decide which is less evil.
A friend once asked me why I choose to sit out the "real election" for local mayor -- that is, the Democratic primary. (This city is something like 75% or 80% Democrat; no one else need apply for local office.) Registering as a Libertarian, in addition to matching my beliefs more closely, also helps that party get onto the ballot and onto the registration form, and ultimately I think that's more important. You can actually check "Libertarian" on the voter-registration form now (you couldn't 15 years ago), because we passed a threshold with write-ins. Now we have to maintain it. If even a few people look at that option on the form and say "hey, whazzat?" before checking Democrat or Republican, we might increase awareness that there are other options. And maybe eventually that'll mean Libertarians in local offices. (Forget the national races; win local offices first and then focus on Congress, IMO.) I'm not active with the party itself, but at least my registration helps out a little.
Oh, in case you're wondering: I didn't live here during the last mayoral primary; Mayor Murphy is not my fault. I might have actually changed party registration for that vote becuase Murphy was so clearly a destructive force even then. To paraphrase a current anti-Bush campaign: I'd rather vote for a rabid weasel than Tom Murphy.
As I was voting I heard one of the workers say "that's the first Independent of the day". I'm not actually an Independent; I'm a registered Libertarian. To them it's the same thing: disable everything except the ballot initiative. The bundle of cards from which they pulled my registration seemed to represent about 10% of all cards, based on what I saw in the bin. (No, it didn't include Republicans.) Interesting. I wonder if the set of people registered in minor parties has a higher turn-out rate than the Republicans and Democrats. I suspect that people who register in minor parties are more likely to be politically active, but I don't know where to find the data on turn-out by party.
I considered temporarily changing my registration to Republican so I could influence that hot Senate race, but decided against. It feels wrong even though it's legal, and that race may already be messed up because the Democrats were encouraging their people to do that very thing and I suspect a bunch of them did. (The incumbent is mostly a Democrat in Republican's clothing; the challenger is a more traditional Republican. The Dems want to knock the challenger out early.) Besides, I couldn't decide which is less evil.
A friend once asked me why I choose to sit out the "real election" for local mayor -- that is, the Democratic primary. (This city is something like 75% or 80% Democrat; no one else need apply for local office.) Registering as a Libertarian, in addition to matching my beliefs more closely, also helps that party get onto the ballot and onto the registration form, and ultimately I think that's more important. You can actually check "Libertarian" on the voter-registration form now (you couldn't 15 years ago), because we passed a threshold with write-ins. Now we have to maintain it. If even a few people look at that option on the form and say "hey, whazzat?" before checking Democrat or Republican, we might increase awareness that there are other options. And maybe eventually that'll mean Libertarians in local offices. (Forget the national races; win local offices first and then focus on Congress, IMO.) I'm not active with the party itself, but at least my registration helps out a little.
Oh, in case you're wondering: I didn't live here during the last mayoral primary; Mayor Murphy is not my fault. I might have actually changed party registration for that vote becuase Murphy was so clearly a destructive force even then. To paraphrase a current anti-Bush campaign: I'd rather vote for a rabid weasel than Tom Murphy.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-04-27 10:27 am (UTC)You can't; you have to do it 30 days in advance. So it requires premeditation (and then you have to remember to switch it back), but we've known that this race was going to be close for a while so that was feasible.
What always struck me about the Primary system is that it gives people two votes against a really bad candidate (or rather, one vote at two separate times).
Well, some people get two votes; others get one. (One should be enough, of course. :-) ) If you've got bad candidates coming up through multiple parties, for example, you can't ding all of 'em yourself.
You might even have gotten me to switch to Libertarian for November, thanks for posting the info.
You're welcome. I no longer know what the magic number is (it's a percentage of registered voters). Near as I can tell, the only reason not to "register your conscience", so to speak, is to be able to vote in a target primary. For November that doesn't matter. (And given how late our primary is, I had already written off the presidential primary.)