Bill wants open primaries nationwide
Critics say only party members should select nominees, refuting the claim that doing so puts more ideologically extreme candidates on the ballot.
A new bill pending in Congress would mandate open primaries across the country, giving roughly 23.5 million registered independents a chance to nominate candidates for federal office.
The “Let America Vote Act,” sponsored by Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, R-Pa., and cosigned by Reps. Jared Golden, D-Maine; Andrew Garbarino, R-N.Y.; and Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, D-Wash., would impact 22 states where primary elections remained closed to registered party members.
“This commonsense reform is not political nor controversial,” Fitzpatrick said Monday on X, formerly known as Twitter. “It secures the fundamental right of every American citizen to vote, regardless of political affiliation, while safeguarding election integrity by prohibiting noncitizens from participating in tax-payer-funded elections.”
According to Unite America, only 8% of eligible voters elected 83% of the members of the U.S. House of Representatives in 2022. So far this year, the organization says, 5% of voters have chosen 62% of the chamber.
Nick Troiano, the organization's executive director, described the legislation as the “single greatest expansion of voting rights” since the voting age was lowered in 1971.
“At a time when a majority of voters identify as independent – including a majority of veterans who fought for our country and a majority of young people who are the future of our country – it’s unconscionable that closed primaries deny nearly 24 million unaffiliated Americans the right to vote in taxpayer-funded elections this year.
“This Act would end taxation without representation once and for all, and ensure every voter, regardless of party, can fully exercise their right to vote,” he added.
Critics say only party members should select nominees, refuting the claim that doing so puts more ideologically extreme candidates on the ballot.
Chris Tohir, in a 2023 policy brief for the Connecticut-based Yankee Institute, says of closed primaries, “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”
“American politics has a strong history and tradition of the power and autonomy of political parties to elect their own candidates with minimal interference,” he wrote. “Requiring that someone be a party member to vote in a primary is not disenfranchisement – it is freedom of association.”