Closed primaries are simply a way to perpetuate entrenched power and corporate control. New York's democratic registration deadline of last October was especially egregious. If you have good ideas, you should welcome as many voters as possible.
JSO talks about Trump's problems in the general, but Hillary might not have some of her own come November. Her favorability with indies is plummeting.
http://www.commondreams.org/views/2016/ ... -primariesIt is estimated three million registered voters—about 27 percent of voters—were disenfranchised in New York because of the state’s closed primary system. Independents had to declare their party affiliation by October 19 if they wanted to vote in the Democratic primary. The closed primary system was a source of outrage, which led to a lawsuit which was recently thrown out by a judge..........
In January, Gallup reported the number of Americans, who affiliate as Democrats or Republicans, were near “historic lows.” The number of people, who describe themselves as independents, has risen sharply to four out of ten Americans during the last five years.
Fewer and fewer Americans are willing to support the two-party system. In September, Gallup also released a poll that showed 60 percent say a major third party is needed for “adequate representation.” Seventy-eight percent of independents said there should be a major third party.
More specifically, for example, there are more than one million unaffiliated voters in Colorado, who outnumber Republicans and Democrats registered in the state. Many are part of the millennial generation (which is the generation Sanders continues to win by huge margins).
Closed primaries are a means for the Democratic Party to keep a stranglehold on the voting process and stymie this movement away from the Democratic Party. However, it could backfire tremendously in a general election, when every citizen is able to vote for a presidential candidate regardless of their party affiliation........
“An April Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll found that Mrs. Clinton’s favorability rating among independents had dropped 15 percentage points in the last four months alone,” according to a Wall Street Journal report. “That poll found that 20 percent of independents viewed Mrs. Clinton positively, compared with 62 percent who viewed her negatively—a gap of 42 percentage points.”











