After Bernie Sanders Delegate Issue, Colorado Creates Open Primaries For Independent Voters [View all]
Colorado Voting Rights: After Bernie Sanders Delegate Issue, State Creates Open Primaries For Independent Voters
Mary Pascaline
International Business Times
Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper signed two ballot measures Proposition 107 and Proposition 108 into law Tuesday. The measures call for presidential primaries to be held every four years in the state and allow unaffiliated voters to cast their ballots in the primary elections.
Proposition 107 establishes presidential primaries in the state in which unaffiliated voters can cast their ballots without having to declare a party affiliation. The measure will cost counties about $5.3 million during the 2019 fiscal year but the state would reimburse at least $2.6 million of the total cost.
Meanwhile, Proposition 108 approved by 53 percent of voters provides unaffiliated voters with the option of choosing which partys primary to vote in. The measure will increase spending by the secretary of states office by $160,000 but it's a one-time expenditure that allows for changes to the states voting systems. It will, however, cost counties about $750,000 every two years to mail ballots to unaffiliated voters.
During the 2016 election race, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders won 41 delegates in Colorado compared to his rival Hillary Clintons 25. A straw poll conducted in March this year found that 59 percent of the states voters preferred Sanders as president. However, both the Democratic and Republican caucuses in Colorado were embroiled in controversies, which increased demands to replace the caucuses with open primary elections.
Caucuses are insane, and we should make all primaries open.