Arizona voters will decide on establishing open primaries in elections
Source: AP
Updated 8:31 PM EDT, October 4, 2024
PHOENIX (AP) The Arizona Supreme Court cleared the way Friday for voters to decide on establishing open primaries for future elections in which all candidates compete against each other regardless of their party affiliation.
The citizen-led initiative, labeled as Proposition 140, already had been printed on ballots that county officials recently started mailing to overseas and uniformed voters. But it wasnt clear those votes would be counted until the courts decision that ended two months of legal wrangling.
A bipartisan committee called Make Elections Fair AZ had campaigned and collected enough signatures for the initiative to qualify for the ballot. The courts decision upheld the integrity of our elections and protected the right of every voter to have a fair and transparent choice, said Chuck Coughlin, the committees treasurer.
A conservative advocacy group, Arizona Free Enterprise Club, had previously challenged the number of signatures submitted in support of the initiative. Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Frank Moskowitz ruled in September that enough signatures were gathered. The Supreme Courts ruling on Friday affirmed that lower courts decision.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/arizona-supreme-court-ballot-open-primary-election-8c7cea0b4bcc07b8310f7007fee8338f
murielm99
(31,427 posts)That means we do not have to register by party. We can go to the polls and request a Democratic or Republican ballot, whichever we please. Some states have closed primaries that require people to register by party. I don't see how what you are saying would work. In some states, one party or the other would not appear on the ballot at all. Could you clarify, please?
I made no comment for this OP. Just posted excerpts from the news source which was Associated Press.
Just as a note, we have closed primaries in PA so only voters registered for a particular party can vote for candidates in that party. However if there are any ballot questions scheduled to appear on a ballot during a primary, then Independents/unaffiliated can vote for that (only).
murielm99
(31,427 posts)I was not looking for an argument, just wondering if you knew more.
BumRushDaShow
(142,096 posts)I know there were a couple other states that not only wanted to have an "open"primary but either a "ranked choice" one (like Alaska) or a "jungle primary" (like California).
Ballotpedia has a good breakdown for what each state does for their primary - https://ballotpedia.org/Primary_election_types_by_state
Apparently AZ currently has what they call a "semi-closed" primary - https://ballotpedia.org/Primary_elections_in_Arizona
According to their current state law, that means that an unaffiliated voter CAN actually vote in the primary, but would need to pick either one or the other party's slate to vote for (i.e., no crossovers). Otherwise, the voter can only vote for their own registered party's slate of candidates.
They apparently want to open it up as a free-for-all although I haven't looked at what the referendum wording is to see the details beyond "open".