Time Magazine: If We’re Serious About Saving American Democracy, This Voting System Might Be the Key

New York City has chosen its next Mayor. It happened more than four months before election day, November 2, when Eric Adams won the Democratic primary.
Healthy democracy requires competition

I am a fourth generation South Dakotan and a lifelong Republican. I was once again disappointed last week as another legislative session came to an end marked by senseless disputes between far-right Republicans and their slightly more moderate brethren on issues of little importance to most of us.
Fear and Retribution

Tens of thousands of former Republican voters have changed their party registration since the events of January 6 in our nation’s capital, with most registering as independents or with a minor political party.
The Atlantic: What if the Parties Didn’t Run Primaries

Building off success in Nebraska and California, advocates want to take nonpartisan elections nationwide.
Scwarzenegger in Politico: How to Fix Polarization? Ban partisan gerrymandering and enact open primaries.

In my second inaugural address, I said, “The American people are instinctively centrist. So should be our government.” That was in 2007. When I delivered the speech, 30 percent of Americans considered themselves Republicans, 35 percent Democrats and 34 percent independents.
Jessie Fields in Sun Sentinel: Open primaries will benefit minority voters

Florida voters will be asked in November to approve Amendment 3, which would create an open primary system for state offices. Don’t believe scare tactics that the top-two system will keep Blacks from getting elected, says Dr. Jessie Fields, a spokesperson for Open Primaries. (Joe Cavaretta/AP)
Scott Maxwell: Orlando Sentinel: Its time for Floridians to change they way we vote in primaries

Voters in Orange County often show up before the polls even open at 7 a.m., as they did at Precinct 516 in Maitland on Election Day 2010. (Joe Burbank/Orlando Sentinel) (Joe Burbank / Orlando Sentinel)
John Opdycke: Want to fix American Politics Open up the Primaries: The Hill

DC politics has gone mad. Americans are now treated to a 24/7 freak show of government dysfunction, charges and countercharges, midnight tweets and myriad other forms of dystopian political theatre.
Jeremy Gruber in The Fulcrum- How an unholy bipartisan alliance would disenfranchise many black Louisianans:

Republicans are using their outrage over Sen. Bill Cassidy’s impeachment vote as an excuse to bully moderate party members. Drew Angerer/Getty Images
Washington Post: Don’t listen to the establishment critics, California’s open primary works–Ro Khanna & Arnold Schwarzenegger

The top-two system means politicians can’t just rely on party to win elections.