In an article published by the Washington Examiner, Jessie Fields describes the pressure the parties have put on communities of color to adhere to the two-party system and the struggles those communities have faced when trying to enact political reform.
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Civics 101 with Jackie Salit, Tiani Coleman and Samara Klar
In a recent episode of the Civics 101 podcast, host Hannah McCarthy is joined by Independent Voting President Jackie Salit, New Hampshire Independent Voters President Tiani Coleman, and Samara Klar of the University of Arizona School of Government and Public Policy for a conversation about the growth and power of independent voters.
Listen below.
What do nonpartisan voters in Nevada want? Moderation (Las Vegas Review-Journal)
Rory Appleton from the Las Vegas Review-Journal contacted Jackie Salit for help in identifying independent voters to be on a panel of nonpartisan Nevada voters discussing local and statewide issues and the presidential election. Those on Appleton’s panel (several of whom are members of our network) all expressed different ideologies, experiences and priorities, but shared one thing in common – the desire to break away from the two-party system.
How impeachment could impact independent voters in 2020 (Fox News)
Watch a panel of independent voters (including Independent Voting Board Member Dr. Jessie Fields, Sue Davies of New Jersey Independent Voters, and Daniel Battista of Baruch College, Civics Unplugged) express their dissatisfaction with the hyper-partisan impeachment process on a segment from Fox News.
Are you an unaffiliated voter? Here’s how political consultants are targeting you (Las Vegas Review-Journal)
In a recent article in the Las Vegas Review-Journal, Jackie Salit, one of several political experts interviewed, speaks with journalist Rory Appleton on how partisan campaigns try to appeal to the growing number of independents across the country but fail to recognize a greater shift away from party loyalty.
“People are more and more making the link between the hyper-partisanship of politics and the dysfunction of government,” Salit said. “That is very, very troubling to people. And the more people who make that link, the more the parties are being held accountable.”
Arizona Horizon – Voting Rights for Independents is a Civil Rights Issue
Cathy Stewart, Independent Voting’s VP of National Development, appeared with Maricopa County recorder Adrian Fontes on the PBSâs award winning show Arizona Horizon to talk about the voting rights of independents.
Thirty-three percent of all voters and forty-one percent of Latinos in Arizona are independents. Independents can vote in every Arizona primary election except one – the presidential primary. Independent Voting and its local affiliate – Indys4AZ – have been in the trenches working to change this and found an ally in Democrat Adrian Fontes.
Jane Kleeb: 2019 Anti-Corruption Award Honoree
Jane Kleeb was an honoree at the 19th Annual Anti-Corruption Awards sponsored by Independent Voting and held in lower Manhattan on October 25th. Over one hundred guests attended. Jane is the Democratic Party State Chair of Nebraska. In 2019, she was a champion for the inclusion of independents in the 2020 presidential primary and under her leadership, her state party created a binding open presidential primary, in which independents are welcome. At the request of Independent Voting, Jane went beyond Nebraska and lobbied fellow Democratic state party leaders in other states to open their primaries. Jane was unable to leave Nebraska to be be at the Anti-Corruption Awards in NYC , but sent this video acceptance speech which was played at the event.
Touro Law Review: A Voting Rights Act
Let All Voters Vote: Independent Voters and the Expansion of Voting Rights in the United States
Attorneys Harry Kresky (Independent Voting), Jeremy Gruber (Open Primaries and Michael Hardy (National Action Network) authored an important article appearing in this month’s Touro Law Review. Click here to read the article in full.
Excerpt: “… the legal status of unaffiliated voters must be engaged by our courts if we are to be true to the best traditions of American justice. Unaffiliated voters are treated as second class citizens. This Article has, we hope, demonstrated that the right of unaffiliated voters to vote, and to what are now closed primaries, is a fundamental right inherent in the liberty of the person and her rights to freedom of speech and association under the First Amendment, and under the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. Â This Article has, we hope,demonstrated that in the field of voting the doctrine of âseparate but equalâ has no place. Segregating unaffiliated voters, preventing them from meaningful participation in the primaries, is inherently unequal and deprives them of what is due them under the Constitution.”
Read the Touro Law Review article here.
Spoiler Alert: Schultz, the Democrats and the Independents
By Jackie Salit
First published by IVN
February 13, 2019
There is a dirty word in American politics, worse than âcrook,â more terrible than âphilandererâ more despicable than âliar.â The word is âspoiler.â
A crook, a philanderer and a liar sully the character of an office, or enrich themselves at the public trough, or violate the public trust. These offenses are punishable, sometimes forgivable. But âspoilerâ is the Scarlet Letter. The perpetrator has committed a special crime, one that changes the course of events as they were meant to be. The spoiler brings about a perversion, an unintended consequence, an unnatural outcome.
Or so the Democratic Party would have us believe. After all, if you must defeat Donald Trump to save civilization-as-we-know-it, you must preserve, protect and defendâŠthe Democratic Party! Consequently, the announcement by Howard Schultz, founder of Starbucks, that he is considering a run for President as an independent has brought the Wrath of the Liberal Gods down upon him.
Schultz appeared almost three weeks ago on the CBS show 60 Minutes to break the news. Scott Pelley played the part of the incorruptible interviewer unafraid to ask the tough questions, as if Schultz were Vladimir Putin or Bashar Al-Assad. First question: âWhy run as an independent? Your views have always aligned with the Democratic Party.â Second question: âDo you worry that youâre going to siphon votes away from the Democrats and, thereby, ensure that President Trump has a second term?â
While I was agitated at first by Pelleyâs line of questioning, I realized that he had hit the nail on the head. Because a subplot of the 2020 presidential contest is to question whether the Democratic Party outright owns the opposition to President Trump. Put another way, should the American people be permitted to consider and determine an alternative form of an opposition?
We barely heard the tick-tock of the signature 60 Minutes clock at the end of the segment when Twitter feeds lit up. Professor Larry Sabato, Director of the University of Virginia Center for Politics, and inexplicably the go-to âexpertâ on all things independent, immediately objected to Schultzâs statement that 40% of the electorate are independents. This statement was a core piece of Schultzâs story. The partisan system is no longer serving the interests of the country. Schultz isnât the only one who sees the problem. 40% of the country does as well.
Naturally, Sabato had to pull the rug out from under all that, tweeting that being an independent is âjust a popular cover label for hidden partisans, who are quite loyal to their hidden party.â Â Sabato then joined the chorus of pundits, pollsters, politicians, and poobahs denouncing Schultz as a spoiler. Perhaps theyâd like to throw Schultz in the water and see if he sinks.
Howard Schultz, should he decide to run, will want to prove himself to the 40% and to the independent movementâs leaders, since independents do not automatically vote for anyone, including independents. Thatâs the point, independent voters want to vote for the person, not the party. This community of voters has been swinging across the political divide and deciding national elections since 2008 for reasons that the political establishment refuses to take seriously. At the very least, Schultz is taking us seriously.
Others were quick to condemn the possibility of a Schultz run, including Michael Bloomberg. Having run Mikeâs three Independence Party mayoral campaigns, and having helped to spur his efforts to bring nonpartisan political reform to New York City (sadly, we failed) I give him credit for his past independent leadership. Now that he is a Democrat, surrounded by Democratic advisors, I fear he has lost his âindependent touch.â Bloombergâs polemic against Schultz is based on the âdata.â This data âprovedâ that the White House was unwinnable for an independent in 2016 and, more importantly, that such a scenario would elect Donald Trump. Ergo, Howard should stand down in 2020 because he is a spoiler. Never mind that Trump won the election in 2016 after Mike stood down.
All the âdataâ in the world might miss the public appetite for an electoral revolt that overwhelms the two-party status quo. We surely need to give that possibility room to breathe. Political science, polling and traditional numbers-crunching are sometimes competent at capturing what is, though they missed the 2016 presidential election by a mile. But how shall we measure something that is becoming? And more importantly, how do we disrupters navigate through a system that is structured to crush the possibility that something in the process of becoming can be actualized?
Americaâs troubles did not begin when Donald Trump made his way to the White House, far from it. Steve Schmidt, the sharp-tongued human steamroller political consultant who is now advising Schultz, offered a blistering critique of the Liberal Establishmentâs attacks on Schultz. âAre we fated into perpetuity to be in this cycle of revenge politics, of self-interestâŠor can we do something better?â Schmidt goes on, âWe decry rightly the illiberalism of Donald Trump, his attacks on the press, his attacks on the rule of law. But what about the illiberalism of people who claim to oppose Trump who shout down people from the public square?â
Schmidt asks good questions, but doesnât go far enough. For the immediate hysteria of the Democratic Party opinion makers has an identifiable cause. The party is mired in its own internal battlesâleft vs. center, Old Guard vs. Young Turks, black and brown vs. white, female vs. male, the proponents of supertaxing the superrich vs. the fiscal moderates. These factions will compete for the nomination, a competition that will run through the all-important early fundraising, the primary debates, the primaries and caucuses and the delegated convention in July. In order to mend ideological fences, bring the party back together and mount a fierce general election campaign, the Democratic leadership must promote the idea that anything and everything must be sacrificed and back-burnered to drive Donald Trump from office. Thus, the âspoilerâ argument must be weaponized early and without reserve.
The fact is that no one knows what the outcome of a three-way or four-way race for the Presidency in 2020 might produce. This is an unprecedented environment, and yes, independent voters are very much in play. Right now Independent Voting is pressing the parties, particularly the Democratic Party, to guarantee that all its presidential primaries will be open to non-aligned voters. Should they accede to that, it could open not just the partiesâ primaries, which denied access to over 25 million independents in 2016, but a process for negotiating a potential Independent/Democrat political coalition for 2020.
For now, Howard Schultz is doing the country a great service, whether he planned to or not. He is forcing a public conversation about the 2020 presidential process, about the 40% of Americans who are independents, and about the authoritarian self-interest of the Democratic Party. Thatâs a good start.
Join Jackie Salitâs National Conference call entitled, âIndependent Eyes on 2020: Howard Schultz, Hysterical Democrats, Authoritarian Republicans and the Rules of the Game.â Sign up here and submit a question to Jackie.
Read: âA Brief Recap of Some Spoiler Controversiesâ w/ historical news footage from prior independent campaigns.
A Brief Recap of Some Spoiler Controversies
Since Howard Schultzâs announcement, and the sudden surge of spoiler propaganda, much has been made of the 1992 independent presidential campaign of Ross Perot who, it is frequently asserted, âcostâ George H.W. Bush his re-election. Take a few minutes to look at the 10 minute mini-documentary created by Five-Thirty-Eight titled âThe Perot Myth,â which chronicles the fallacy of that spoiler myth. Perot actually pulled equally from Republican and Democrat voters.
Let us not forget that Perot was under attack from multiple sides as soon as he started showing in the polls. These attacks persisted into his second run in 1996, when the tactic of his candidacy became to promote an all-independents primary and to create a new political party. Opponents went to work dismissing the Perot Movement as a âshamâ and âshell gameâ by an egoistic billionaire. Sound familiar? Hereâs a link to a CNBCÂ show I did with GOP strategist John Podhoretz at the time, where we debated the ârealityâ of the movement.
In 1988, a Black developmental psychologist and radical community organizer, Dr. Lenora Fulani, ran for President as an independent and was the first woman and first African American to access the ballot in all 50 states. Turning the spoiler attack on its head, Fulani appealed to Black voters to use their power to deny Michael Dukakis and the Democratic Party the White House in response to their treatment of Jesse Jackson and the Rainbow Coalition. She found herself in the crosshairs of Democratic wrath when Michael Dukakis advisor Ron Brown called her campaign âridiculous.â Here are portions of a CBS news clip from 1988 covering the controversy.