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The Games Politicians Play After Voters Pass Election Reforms

As IVN’s Shawn Griffiths travels to Miami to share hard-earned intel at the National Association of Nonpartisan Reformers (NANR) conference, Chad and Cara focus on Washington, DC, where a 73 percent mandate for an open primary and ranked-choice voting is being slow-walked into something smaller and

The Games Politicians Play After Voters Pass Election Reforms
Photo by A Chosen Soul on Unsplash. Unsplash+ license obtained by IVN Editor Shawn Griffiths.
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As IVN’s Shawn Griffiths travels to Miami to share hard-earned intel at the National Association of Nonpartisan Reformers (NANR) conference, Chad and Cara focus on Washington, DC, where a 73 percent mandate for an open primary and ranked-choice voting is being slow-walked into something smaller and safer for the political class. It’s a replay of battles in Maine, New York, California, and Alaska - places where the fight for reform continued long after Election Night.

For anyone wondering why popular reforms like RCV and Open Primaries are so hard to pass and protect, this episode offers at least one answer: power never yields without sustained resistance, so reformers survive by comparing notes, learning from one another, and sticking together.

Listen to this episode and more from Independent Voter Project on Spotify and Apple Music.

Cara Brown McCormick

Cara Brown McCormick

Cara McCormick, principal at Smart Campaigns, advises on strategy and research. With 10+ years in major races, she led Maine’s historic move to ranked choice voting. Her work focuses on election reforms that improve representation and voter choice.

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