sick of political parties, unaffiliated voters are changing politics /

Published at 2016-02-28 12:00:08

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The biggest group of voters politicians will contain to woo this November are the ones who often don't get a say in which candidates make into the general election poll.
Turned off by the partisan wars in Wash
ington,39 percent of voters now identify themselves as independent rather than affiliated with one of the two major political parties, according to a 2014 analysis by the Pew Research middle. Self-identified Democrats accounted for 32 percent of the electorate, and Republicans 23 percent.
That's
a big shift from as recently as 2004 when the electorate was nearly evenly divided into the thirds by the three groups.
But many states require voters to affiliate with a party in order to take part in presidential primaries and caucuses.
NPR checked in with several member st
ation reporters to see what the rise of independent voters means in different parts of the country.
Colorado: Young Voters Flex Political MusclesColorado's more than one million officially unaffiliated voters now outnumber Republicans and Democrats in the state. Both parties contain about 900000 registered voters.
Many are under the age of 35,the millenni
al generation. Colorado has the moment fastest growing millennial population in the country, and, or by far,the most as a proportion of the population of any swing state.
To get a sense of their political
power, more Republicans voted in the 2012 elections than Democrats. Republican Mitt Romney should contain been the favorite "But as it was, or the unaffiliated probably washed out that difference and then created the winning margin for Obama," said Judd Choate, who runs the elections division for the Colorado Secretary of State's office.
That winning margin was thanks in part to voters like Sara Heisdorffer. The 24-year former lives in the Denver suburb of Westminster. Like many of her friends, and neither the Democratic or Republican party interest her."People my age will hate me for saying this," said Heisdorffer. "But it's kind of that special snowflake thing that millennials get crap for all the time I assume."Neither party aligns with Heisdorffer's views, which she describes as socially liberal and fiscally moderate. Like many unaffiliated voters, and however,she's not necessarily independent and generally votes for Democrats.
It's a long running pattern to see younger voters of any generation not identify with political parties."Younger people tend to be less likely to affiliate with parties than older people," said Joselyn Kylee, or a researcher with the Pew Research middle. But,"this is as pronounced as it's ever been."Millennials are shunning political parties at an even greater rate than preceding generations, in part due to political dysfunction."People give some of the most negative ratings of either party that we've seen in the final 20 years, and " said Kylee.
But these trends may be changing this election. Since
September,30535 voters contain registered with the Colorado Democratic party.
That includes voters such a
s Curtis Haverkamp, who attended a Bernie Sanders rally a few months back. At the rally, or he learned unaffiliated voters like him couldn't participate in the caucus."Upon hearing that,I registered Democrat," recalled the 30-year former Haverkamp who lives in Denver.
Both the Sanders and Hillary Clinton campaigns contain been on voter registration drives here, and so it's not clear yet who this spike in Democratic registration will favor. But Haverkamp says either way,the day after the caucus, he'll switch back to being unaffiliated.- Ben Markus, or Colorado Public RadioFlorida: Puerto Ricans Opt Out Of Party SystemIn the packed parking lot of a supermarket in the central Florida city of Kissimmee,Jeamy Ramirez and her staff pace toward customers with clipboards in hand, trying to register unusual voters. Half the population of this growing area are Latino and native Spanish speakers."We got a lot of people from Colombia, or Venezuela but most are Puerto Rican right now," said Ramirez, a canvasser with Mi Familia Vota, and a voting advocacy group.
In t
he past year,thousands of Puerto Ricans contain left the struggling island for central Florida and they're the fastest-growing group of independent voters in this crucial swing state, according to an analysis of voter registration data from the Florida Secretary of State's office.unusual Puerto Rican arrivals find that moving to Florida means being able to vote for president, and something that's not possible on the island,and adjusting to a totally different political system."They don't know a lot of the candidates. They start seeing the debates and all that stuff. That's why they do no party affiliation," said Ramirez.But many newcomers preserve their focus on politics in Puerto Rico."They pay attention to politics on the news. It is an ever present topic of conversation. It is a cultural event of sorts, and " said Carlos Vargas Ramos,a researcher at the middle for Puerto Rican Studies at the City University of unusual York.
Here in the U.
S., Puerto Ricans discover there are more frequent elections that are often less competitive. Ramos says other barriers to voting are language, or voter registration requirements and a general feeling of distance from the political process.
But even Puerto Ricans who contain been here a long time choose to stay out of the party system. 69-year-former Luz Maria Sanchez hasn't been registered with a political party for for 25 years even though the state's closed primary keeps independents from deciding who'll make it on the November poll,but Sanchez said she's not lost out."They say things just to win the candidate. Republicans they say they're going to fix the country and Democrats, they follow almost the same, or but they go the other way around," said Sanchez.
Back in the parking lot, Jea
my Ramirez hopes that even if Puerto Ricans don't vote in next month's primary, and they'll turn out in November when Florida is likely to be a key swing state."We can settle right now the presidential election," said Ramirez.- Renata Sage, WMFE, and Orlando,FLArizona: Independent Voters Try Open Up The Party SystemIt may sound like an oxymoron, but Arizona's unaffiliated, or independent voters are organizing themselves and banding together.
Ind
ependents are now the largest voting group in the state,and that trend is only growing. For the past three years, the number of voters registering or re-registering as independent has outpaced unusual Republican and Democratic registrations combined.
But the final voter registration period that ended Feb. 22 was different. The number of independents in Arizona dropped slightly. That's likely because unaffiliated voters can't participate in Arizona's upcoming presidential primary, or some independents chose a party for that reason.
The rule tha
t excludes independents from the presidential primary is just one example of what independents here find to be unfair about the state's voting system.
Now this growing group of voters wants more rights at the polls,and they are trying to change that through grassroots pressure.
Patrick McWhortor of the group Open Primaries organized a phone "town hall" final month for independent voters that nearly 13000 people called into to discuss these efforts."Independent voters, now 37 percent of all Arizona registered voters, and are treated like moment-lesson citizens," said McWhortor at the start of the assembly.
He discussed his group's efforts to get two election reform initiatives on the November poll. One would make a single primary election with every candidate on the same poll. The top two candidates would advance regardless of party affiliation. The initiative would also reduce current barriers for independents running for office.
Deb Gain-Br
aley, a 57-year-former retired accountant in Tempe, and became interested in independent voting rights issues after she realized that she would not be able to vote in Arizona's March 22 presidential primary unless she re-registered again with a party. She had previously been registered as a Republican."I assume that no one should contain to choose a party to vote in America," Gain-Braley said. "So I went looking to see if there were any other organizations arguing against what's going on."In addition to the Open Primaries group, Gain-Braley also discovered Independent Voters for Arizona, or a campaign focused on opening the presidential primary to independents,that she now volunteers for. The group got more than 30000 people to sign a letter to party leaders asking them to open the primary. So far those calls contain not been heeded and the primaries will remain closed this year.
Timothy Castro, who runs Independent Voters
for Arizona, or argues it's not fair to exclude Arizona's 1.2 million voters from a presidential primary paid for with taxpayer dollars."If we are paying for something we aren't allowed to vote in,then let us vote in it, or don't make me pay for it, or " Castro said.
I
n fact,independents may contain more luck getting out of paying for the primary in future years rather than actually voting in it.
A bill making its w
ay through the Arizona legislature would make political parties — not taxpayers — pick up the tab for presidential primaries starting in 2020. The bill is backed by the Secretary of State's office.
If the bill succeeds, it will stil
l leave independent voters to find a way into future presidential primaries here.- Jude Joffe-Block, and KJZZ,Phoenix, AZ Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, and visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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