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2016 Postmortem
In reply to the discussion: We Should Only Let Democrats Choose Our Nominee [View all]BlueCaliDem
(15,438 posts)103. I completely agree. eom
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Perez probably feels the same way...Ellison, i'm not sure-he was a Bernie supporter..
asuhornets
Dec 2016
#9
If Sanders could not beat Hillary in the Democratic primaries, why would they think
asuhornets
Dec 2016
#148
I would like the primaries for all parties to be open to all Americans
Zing Zing Zingbah
Dec 2016
#17
You're missing the huge elephant in the room. Clinton, Kerry and Gore had elections stolen . . .
brush
Dec 2016
#104
I disagree..Democrats did not benefit from allowing Independents into the party..Not one bit...nt
asuhornets
Dec 2016
#10
They're voting for a different Party because they don't like the Democratic Party
gklagan
Dec 2016
#157
What about the bad attitudes of millinials and independents who voiced very loudly not voting for...
asuhornets
Dec 2016
#123
when SCOTUS ruled on NY's requirement in 1973, all 3 of the solid liberals agreed that it was absurd
JustinL
Dec 2016
#118
I won't get into the open/closed debate. I'd hope closed primaries are empowered (more delegates)
SaschaHM
Dec 2016
#14
Interesting issue and I can see both sides. I've never liked the opposition meddling in
24601
Dec 2016
#18
On the other hand, if he wasn't allowed to run as Democrat, he could have run as a third party.
LisaL
Dec 2016
#50
The vast majority of "independents" are partisans who just like the term "independent."
Garrett78
Dec 2016
#35
I'd be curious to see who they are asking in their surveys. I think it varies depending on
PatsFan87
Dec 2016
#38
For some, it means Republican. For some, it means Democrat. Very few are swing voters.
Garrett78
Dec 2016
#42
Whatever the reason might be for non-affiliation, the vast majority are partisan.
Garrett78
Dec 2016
#106
I disagree. All candidates campaign to get as many voters from the opposite party to support
napi21
Dec 2016
#25
I would not support the California Democratic Party excluding decline to state registrants.
David__77
Dec 2016
#27
The vast majority of "independents" are partisans who just like the term "independent."
Garrett78
Dec 2016
#29
Joe Manchin likely defines the conservative limit across the Democratic spectrum. But since
24601
Dec 2016
#159
Yes, completely agree. Closed primaries 100%. No open primaries, no undemocratic caucuses.
Maven
Dec 2016
#32
Bernie never said "both parties are the same" and he's not responsible for those who did.
Ken Burch
Dec 2016
#68
My point is how much both turnout and the results differ between primaries and caucuses.
Garrett78
Dec 2016
#95
What do you do in the case of state's where you do not register by party - like VT?
karynnj
Dec 2016
#43
Do you have a link for your allegation about a difference between the parties?
Jim Lane
Dec 2016
#51
They had downballot primary with a non-binding presidential preference poll. Just use that. nt
LLStarks
Dec 2016
#75
But once you vote in a primary, then you are locked into that party for the rest of the cycle
Gothmog
Dec 2016
#109
And the states that don't require party affiliation in their voter registration?
PoindexterOglethorpe
Dec 2016
#83
The vast majority of whom are partisans who just like the term "independent."
Garrett78
Dec 2016
#114
If you don't have the support of the base, you aren't going to win in the general election.
Garrett78
Dec 2016
#117
You notice the way I was talking about the future there, and you keep bringing up Sanders
Kentonio
Dec 2016
#131
The problem is that several states have an open primary by law. Yes we should only let Democrats
totodeinhere
Dec 2016
#125
Even in a state without an open primary, a person can often change party affiliation
Vinca
Dec 2016
#156
I'll say it again, the vast majority of "independents" are strongly partisan.
Garrett78
Dec 2016
#162
I have no problem with that, but lets overhaul the whole damn thing, including the calendar.
Warren DeMontague
Dec 2016
#168
I'd be fine with this if there was some way to allow the 40-some % of Indys
PotatoChip
Dec 2016
#172