Anonymous wrote:You can. I voted for McCain. You will be asked to sign a loyalty pledge.
Anonymous wrote:I'd like to vote for Nikki Haley in the Republican primary and (at least at this point) it doesn't seem there will be a meaningful Democrat primary. Can I just show up and ask for the Republican primary ballot in Virginia or do I need to switch my party affiliation to independent or republican to do that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It just seems deceitful.
No it doesn’t. Go find real problems.
Using the tactics of losers IS a real problem.![]()
Remember Limbaugh coming up with “operation chaos” to damage Hillary in the primaries in 08? I do. Were yo7 even old enough to vote then?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It just seems deceitful.
No it doesn’t. Go find real problems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can. I voted for McCain. You will be asked to sign a loyalty pledge.
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.
And then Brat got spanked by Abigail Spanberger, propelling her political career. And she's very likely to be VA's next Governor.
In the long-run, the Dem strategy worked. Extremely well. They flipped a long time GOP seat and are now set to reclaim Richmond in 2025.
Anonymous wrote:It just seems deceitful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd like to vote for Nikki Haley in the Republican primary and (at least at this point) it doesn't seem there will be a meaningful Democrat primary. Can I just show up and ask for the Republican primary ballot in Virginia or do I need to switch my party affiliation to independent or republican to do that?
Serious question: don’t you think this qualifies as election interference? You have no intention of voting for Nikki Hailey in the general election, correct? You just want to make sure she’s the candidate to oppose Biden, who you presumably support?
Does that seem ……..ethical?………to you?
Why give republicans stuff like this to point at?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can. I voted for McCain. You will be asked to sign a loyalty pledge.
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.
Anonymous wrote:I'd like to vote for Nikki Haley in the Republican primary and (at least at this point) it doesn't seem there will be a meaningful Democrat primary. Can I just show up and ask for the Republican primary ballot in Virginia or do I need to switch my party affiliation to independent or republican to do that?
Anonymous wrote:You can. I voted for McCain. You will be asked to sign a loyalty pledge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is actually a question. I moved to VA decades ago and never needed to pick a party and could vote in any primary. And I’ve done so. Just this year, when affirming that wanted to vote by mail automatically (so Va mails me a ballot automatically), I for the first time saw that I had to choose R or D (or I I think). Not sure what the change is. Saving on postage?
I don’t think we are allowed to vote in both primaries. It’s not about registering with a party in VA but you have one primary vote.
Anonymous wrote:My recent request for mail in ballot in VA required me to choose. That's the first time I recall ever having to check an R or D box in VA.