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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]You can. I voted for McCain. You will be asked to sign a loyalty pledge.[/quote]
This is not true. I’m a lifelong Virginian and been registered to vote since I turned 18 (and I’m old). You do not register with a political party nor do you have to sign any loyalty pledge (WITW is that). For a primary, you simply show up and tell them what primary you’re voting in and they will give you the appropriate ballot. You can only vote in one, so if they’re both democrat and republican primaries at the same time you will have to pick. Crossing party lines happens a lot in Virginia and is a well used strategy. This is how Bratt won the republican primary over Eric Cantor (democrats mobilized in mass and voted in the republican primary for Bratt thinking he would be the easier candidate to beat in the general election). It worked in beating Cantor but then Bratt won the general election. [/quote] Well like I said I remember being told to sign a loyalty pledge when I voted for McCain. Evidently they put a stop to that fascist shit (because Republicans are inherently anti-American fascists) in 2016. https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/virginia-politics/va-elections-board-officially-repeals-loyalty-pledge-at-gop-request/2016/02/04/d2ec2c4a-cb44-11e5-a7b2-5a2f824b02c9_story.html |
Exactly people do it all the time. Pretty common where I am in Moco where the primary effectively is the general election |
What ?!? Please stop |
Obviously |
Not true. In fact just the opposite. Primaries are historically much lower participation. Your vote really does matter. |
You are exactly right. The ignorance of the prior PP is stunning. Even in states with a closed primary, voters should change their party reg according to which primary they feel is more critical and where the want to have a VOICE! The you vote however you want in the general months later. Voting is a choice and a voice. NOT about party reg. Everyone should quit ceding so much power to the two dominant parties. So unhealthy for our democracy. |
Not sure who the governor is has any relevance. |
You can only vote in one primary. |
Disagree. This kind of thinking delivered 2016. Please everyone vote! The primaries are critical in this election. |
| Elections.virginia.gov Answers this question. |
No party, no politician has the right to demand loyalty to them from any American. Republicans in particular should take note of that. |
| I’ve read all comments above and I’m sickened. Hearing people switch “party” line to cast sabotage votes is saddening. If your party has let you down, then by all means, change and vote mind. Voting should be for who support, not for who you think you candidate can beat when the day comes. If that’s what you’re doing then you should stop to think about why the candidate you are trying to disadvantage is such a threat. Ask yourself what everyone else is on board with that you are overlooking in them. That’s non partisan advice by the way. It’s a two way street! |
It’s a free country. People can vote any way they want to, thank heavens. |
| Yes, you can because Virginia has open primaries. I’m a democrat (not registered) but voted for Kasich in 2016 because I was worried about Trump winning. I was fine with Clinton or Bernie. I’ll do the same again this year but for Haley. |
| Yep - I'm a registered Republican. I always vote in the Democrat primaries. |