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I live in Texas. The sad facts are (1) that whoever wins the GOP primary for most state offices will prevail in the general election, simply because of the number of voters who now pull the straight-party lever for the GOP, and (2) that there are some real differences among the (likely) GOP candidates. For example, Kay Bailey Hutchinson, currently a US Senator, is hinting that she would like to become governor. While I am not a great fan of hers, she is much better than the incumbent, Rick Perry. Hutchinson, for example, supports reproductive rights, and voted against some of Bush's more egregious judicial appointees. Perry is a smarmy Bush acolyte. We would do our state and nation a favor by booting him from the playing field.
If a significant fraction of Democrats and independents vote in the GOP primary, it could be enough to keep some of the worse out of office, and it has more likely impact than voting in the Democratic primary. Voting in a primary doesn't commit you to voting for a single GOP candidate in the general election. Its one drawback, in Texas, is that it prevents you from signing a petition to get a third party on the ballot. (I think the LP and Greens already qualify, however.)
Obviously, the importance of doing this, and the difficulty and drawbacks, vary from state to state. In Texas, we don't register as Republican or Democrat, and can pick on the morning of the primary which party's we wish to vote. It seems to me that Texas is a state where it makes a lot of sense for everyone who opposes the new GOP to become a Republican for a day.
:evilgrin:
Comments? If this is desirable, how do we go about organizing to maximize its effectiveness?
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