Dueling Colorado Proposals on How Parties Nominate Candidates

Colorado now has closed primary elections, and generally only the Democratic and Republican Parties have primary elections, although in rare cases qualified minor parties also have them. Also, currently, Colorado has no presidential primaries

An initiative is circulating that would amend the law so that independent voters could vote in a special primary ballot that includes the names of all candidates. The initiative says if a party doesn’t like that, if three-fourths of the members of the state central committee choose to nominate for all office by party meeting instead of a primary, that is allowed. However, the proponents know that it is very difficult for any party to pass anything that controversial with a three-fourths vote. Here is the text of the initiative.

Another initiative is circulating that would provide for a presidential primary. Here is the text. It says that independents could vote in any party’s presidential primary.

Finally, a bill in the legislature would set up a presidential primary. It provides that all independent voters would be free to temporarily join a party, and then they could vote in that party’s presidential primary, and they would automatically become independents again a few months after the presidential primary. The bill, HB 1454, passed the House Committee that handles election law bills on April 25, and it passed the House Appropriations Committee on April 28. However, it was amended on April 28 to say that if any initiative on the subject of presidential primaries passes in November, that initiative is automatically amended to say that any party is free to choose to nominate for all office by party meeting instead of by primary.

Proponents of HB 1454 inserted this amendment to help defeat the presidential primary initiative if it gets on the ballot. Proponents of the bill say that the presidential primary initiative idea would cost far too much money. This is because all registered voters in Colorado automatically receive ballots in the postal mail, and proponents of HB 1454 say that if the initiative passes, thousands of ballots would need to be mailed to all independents (the envelope would include both a Democratic ballot and a Republican ballot), and many or most of those ballots would never be returned and would be wasted. By contrast, the bill requires independents to request a presidential primary ballot, so fewer ballots would need to be printed and mailed.


Comments

Dueling Colorado Proposals on How Parties Nominate Candidates — 4 Comments

  1. Jim Riely… and also solidifies the two party system. All you have to do is look at California to see that. Repubs and Dems aren’t fixing our problems. So if you want a guaranteed collapse of America you’re idea there is great. Otherwise it’s dumb as fuck. The only time third parties win top 2 races is when the race is nonpartisan.

  2. ONE election day — NO robot party hack primaries, etc.
    Ballot access ONLY via equal nominating petitions — to get somewhat SERIOUS candidates.
    P.R. and NONPARTISAN App.V.

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